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'''Prem Rawat''', also called '''Maharaji''' and formerly known as '''Guru Maharaj Ji''' (''see main article: ]''), along with the enthusiasm he inspires in his students, has been the subjects of controversy and criticism to some degree since his early beginnings. | |||
The sources of the criticisms of Prem Rawat, the ] and ] include persons related to the ] in the 1970s, some media articles in the ]s and ]s, some articles from the 1970s and early 1980s by several scholars, and since the 1990s from a small group of former members that call themselves ''Ex-premies'' {{ref|eporg}}. They level criticism that Rawat made claims of personal divinity or that the critic's former belief in his personal divinity and consequent dissonance with his newer image as human teacher remains unresolved, claims of ] and financial exploitation, hypocrisy, encouragement of uncritical acceptance, and more. | |||
The organizations categorize their criticism as allegations ] typically make, challenge their character and motives and refers to them as "an insignificantly small ] of no more than a handful of individuals who constantly harass Rawat and his students"{{ref|au_faq}} and refer to affidavits filled by two Ex-premies in which they admit under oath that the underlying purpose of the Ex-premie group is to harass, defame and annoy Rawat and his students, and to purposefully interfere with their right to peacefully assemble and discuss Knowledge. {{ref|JMG_affidavit}}. | |||
==Criticism in the media== | |||
After Prem Rawat's first arrival in the ] and ] in ] at the age of thirteen and through the ] he, his followers, and his organizations attracted a fair amount of media scrutiny and attention, some positive and some negative. Examples of articles appearing in the mainstream press in that decade include an ] article in ]{{ref|RStonesMag}} and a ] article in the ]. {{ref|NYRB}}. During the ]s and until the late ], there was very little media coverage of Prem Rawat and his organizations, either positive or negative. | |||
==Criticism by the Ex-premie group== | |||
Since the late 1990s, with the arrival of the Internet, the main criticism against Rawat, his students, and affiliated groups The Prem Rawat Foundation and Elan Vital, has been orchestrated by a small group of vocal ex-followers with an active Internet presence. They call themselves "Ex-Premies," based on the practice, discontinued in the West but ongoing in ], of Rawat's followers calling themselves "]." | |||
Some of these critics have been former senior staff within the organizations and have rejected Rawat and his teachings after years of practicing his techniques. They deny belonging to an organized group, asserting instead they are a small number of internationally dispersed individuals tied together only by their common activism against Rawat, although many of the webpages utilized by the Ex-Premies are ostensibly registered with ICANN as organizations{{ref|ICANN1}}. John Brauns, a member of ex-premie group has put online multiple websites from which simliar grievances and allegations are presented.{{ref|jb_websites}} The FAQ of Elan Vital asserts that "'the purpose of this trick is to try and flood Internet search engines with a skewed amount of negative websites."{{ref|faq_opp1}} They further complain that Brauns has made no effort to provide journalists or interested parties with any independently verifiable documents or factual support for the allegations appearing on his websites. | |||
===Allegations=== | |||
====Claims of personal divinity==== | |||
One of the Ex-Premie group's central criticisms is that from the age of eight until his mid-twenties Prem Rawat made public claims of personal divinity and that he and his followers continue to make such claims in private while denying them in public. They demand that Rawat and/or Elan Vital explicitly disabuse all his current followers of such claims. | |||
====Claims of financial exploitation==== | |||
The Ex-premie group complain that Prem Rawat exploited them to build a luxurious lifestyle for himself, and blame themselves for being gullible and naive in giving donations. On 14 February 1981 an article appeared in the Dutch magazine ] in which ex-premie Jos Lammers complained about Maharaji's behavior when visiting the Netherlands. His complaints are that Rawat surrounded himself with "security premies" and refrained to associate with local premie leaders and having the local DLM center having to pay for his shoppings, while at the same time, according to Lammers, Rawat received huge amounts of fiancial donations during his programs. The organizations report that Rawat and his family are entirely supported by personal business investments with no money flowing to them from Elan Vital or The Prem Rawat Foundation{{ref|money}}. Members of the Ex-Premie group have filed friovolous complaints with tax and charity authorities, but no wrongdoing was ever found. | |||
====Lack of credibility==== | |||
The Ex-premie group contends Prem Rawat has no credibility in his teachings because of a large gap they assert exists between what he once prescribed for his personnel and followers and what he practiced himself, a gap they characterize as hypocrisy. This criticism is based largely on allegations made by Michael Donner, Bob Mishler and Michael Dettmers in the 1970s and early 1980s, in which they acusse Rawat of alcoholism, marijuana use, anxietly and infidelity, that they made after they left the organization or were fired. {{ref|apost}}. Elan Vital characterizes these people and their testimony as fitting the profile of "Type III" ], who become "professional enemies" of the formerly revered organization.{{ref|acropolis}}. Ex-premies also allege that organizations engage in various practices to magnify his perceived significance and prestige such as intentionally inflating the estimates of the numbers attending his meetings and arranging speaking engagements that falsely imply association with prestigious institutions such as the ]. The Prem Rawat Foundation discusses in its website that the audiences of Rawat's meetings include dignitaries, university students, educators, and staff from the host institutions, noting that representatives from these institutions have introduced Rawat at these events and praised his work. {{ref|tprf_pr}} | |||
====Uniqueness of Knowledge techniques==== | |||
The Ex-premie group claim that the techniques of Knowledge Rawat teaches have been taught for hundreds of years and are not unique. | |||
See also ]. | |||
====Assertions of being the only "Perfect Master" ==== | |||
The Ex-premie group claim that Rawat's credibility is further undermined by his claim to be the only Perfect Master. They point to an interview conducted in August 1973 with the ] in which Rawat expressed the opinion that there was only one Perfect Mater. Supporters say that indeed Maharaji expressed his understading that there is only one perfect master, but that he never said he was one and that is up to the student to to “find the one you can trust to help you get where you want to go and stick with him.” | |||
See also ]. | |||
===Elan Vital's complaints against the ex-premie group=== | |||
Elan Vital Australia has published a long list of the activites of the Ex-Premie group, stating that "using the anonymity of the Internet, they have discussed various plans and threats" including inciting people via the Internet to drug and kidnap members of Maharaji's family, conducting physical assaults, mounting campaigns of telephone calls and letter writing to the employers of Maharaji's students "warning" them that they employ "a member of a dangerous cult", and more.{{ref|faq_opp1}} | |||
Elan Vital, UK, a charitable organization established in the United Kingdom, present their opinion in this matter: '' "Elan Vital supports freedom of speech and the rights of an individual to express differing opinions. Any legitimate disagreements are looked at sympathetically and responded to accordingly. Over the past thirty years, many thousands of people in Britain have practised Prem Rawat's teaching of inner peace and found them of great benefit in their lives. At the same time, many have also decided not to pursue them and have moved away with no ill feelings. However, to our chagrin, a very small number have formed themselves into a vociferously complaining opposition of whom some actively work against Prem Rawat and Elan Vital in a way that can only be characterised as that of a 'hate group'. For a few years, a small Internet-based hate group of approximately twenty disgruntled former students operating under the cloak of anonymity has been harassing Maharaji, his students and Elan Vital. They have made no effort to provide journalists or interested parties with any independently verifiable documents or factual support for any of their allegations. Using mostly anonymous Internet postings, the front of an unregistered association and a Webmaster in the Republic of Latvia, they have committed harassing and sometimes unlawful acts."'' | |||
In an 2005 affidfavit filed under oath, former Ex-premie John Macgregor seems to confirm many of these allegations. He names as the most prominent members and central organizers of this group John Brauns, Jim Heller, Marianne Bachers, Nick Wright and Jean-Michel Kahn. Macgregor says that in his personal experience many of the people in the Ex-premie group are ''"irrational, obsessed, and motivated by ill-directed anger and that when they purport to report on factual matters they are frequently false and defamatory, unsupported by actual fact basis, and motivated in many instances by hatred, ill will and spite." '' Macgregor also admitted that with the support and encouragement of the Ex-premies, he filed several frivolous complaints to tax and regulatory bodies around the world, ''"hoping to initiate expensive and burdensome investigation of Rawat and related volunteer entities". Macgregor also admitted that he "had no factual basis upon which to make such allegations"'' and that the complaints were supported by ''"unauthenticated, incomplete or out-of-context documents designed to paint a sinister picture."''*{{ref|JMG_affidavit}}. | |||
Elan Vital characterizes the Ex-Premie group as unreliable in their allegations because of members' personal credibility problems such as obsessive Internet postings, illegal drug dealing, criminal history, mental illness, and involvement in manufacturing pornography{{ref|porno}}. It points to the conviction of one group member, Neville Ackland, for possession of $2.5 million worth of drugs and illegal weapons{{ref|ackland}}. | |||
===Legal actions and disputes=== | |||
Organizations affiliated with Prem Rawat have recently tpursued civil actions against members of the Ex-Premie group, with varying degrees of success. The Ex-Premie group has not prevailed in a formal legal complaint brought by organizations affiliated with Prem Rawat's teachings. | |||
* In 2002 allegations were made agains members of the Ex-premie group to have engaged in distributing forged email purporting to come from Brisbane attorney Damian Scattini who represents Elan Vital in Australia. That email was designed to embarass Scattini,c ontaining an falsified "invitation" from Scattini, who is not a student of Rawat's, to "worship" Rawat. The bogus email contained the same photographs of Rawat in Hindu religious clothing as appears on the Ex-Premie group's websites. Scattini filed a now-pending criminal complaint with Queensland authorities.{{ref|scattini}} Ex-premie Jim Heller has applauded and defended the scheme, but denied any involvement. | |||
*In April 2003, lawyers acting for Elan Vital USA sent letters to the hosts of the ex-premie websites ex-premie.org, ex-premie2.org, ex-premie3.org and also to Google, claiming that pages on these sites violated Elan Vital's copyright on certain material, including quotations from Rawat, photos of Rawat, and song lyrics. The webmaster of the U.S. sites, ex-premie.org and ex-premie3.org, challenged these claims, asserting that publication of the material was allowed under the ]. | |||
*In late 2003, The Prem Rawat Foundation brought a successful Internet domain name administrative proceeding, known as a "] proceeding," against group member Jeffrey Leason (also known as "Roger Drek") for registering the Internet domain name "TPRF.biz" and using it to surreptitiously direct Internet users to his own website critical of TPRF, apparently in an exercise of the non-commercial variant of ] known as "cybergriping." The administrative tribunal in 2004 ruled against Leason, reasoning that his actions were not protected as free speech because he used for his domain name the precise name of his target rather than a distinctive variant, leading to the conclusion that his motivation was either to deceive Internet users into believing the website was sponsored by TPRF or else to drive them away from TPRF websites. The tribunal held this to be a bad faith use of the TPRF.biz domain name and directed the domain name be transferred over to the organization. | |||
*Two ex-premies, Tom Gubler and John Macgregor, were found civilly liable in January 2004 for a scheme to misappropriate data from Elan Vital's computers, and were enjoined by an Australian court from using the wrongfully taken documents and ordered to pay Elan Vital's legal costs. Gubler was a computer repair technician with access to Elan Vital's computers who at the behest of Macgregor, a freelance journalist, surreptitiously copied Elan Vital's data and emailed it to Macgregor and others. Their activities were exposed and Elan Vital brought injunction actions against both men. Macgregor ran away from law enforcement officers to keep his computer from a court-ordered examination, but relented after being held in contempt of court . Gubler originally testified in an affidavit that the ex-premies were a hate group existing as part of a conspiracy of ex-premies designed to harass Rawat and his students and to interfere with the ability of persons to follow their spiritual beliefs. Gubler later attempted to recant that testimony, claiming he signed this affidavit under duress, . Finding Macgregor and Gubler "utterly lacking in credibility" the court refused to allow Gubler to withdraw his earlier admissions.,. Macgregor unsuccessfully mounted the defense that his goal was to expose wrongdoing by the organization, but the court held this an insufficient justification, and noted that misappropriated material did not show any wrongdoing by Rawat or the organizations. In October 2004, after being discovered that Macgregor lied under oath and after failing to appear in court, an Australian-wide arrest warrant was issued against him for criminal perjury. In January 2005, in a post on an ex-premie discussion board titled "Apology to Maharaji and premies", Macgregor ostensibly apologized for causing pain to Rawat's family and to his students , and admitted that he had been "irrational" and "obsessed." His apology generated a variety of responses, including criticism from other ex-premies that doubted his sincerity, and he was accused of "selling them out" by attempting to appease Elan Vital with his apology. In April 2005, in an affidavit filed under oath, Macgregor emphasized his apology by affirming under oath that " I owe Prem Rawat, the claimants, their legal advisers and all of Rawat's students and apology for my actions, and for allowing myself to be used by the Ex-Prfemie Group. I believe that persons have the right to chose their own path of spiritual discovery, and the right to leave a chosen path, but that people do not have the right to incite hatred and interfere with other's choices." | |||
* In September ] on an anonymous website at Geocities to coordinate a campaign to write to University College Chester (now the ]), the employer of ], asking that he be sanctioned for publishing papers favorable to Rawat in academic publications without informing the publications that he was a follower of Rawat's. Geaves replied that he has always been open about his allegiances, and faults his critics for, he alleges, not identifying themselves. Supporters see this as a ] attack on Geaves' professional life and an attempt to have him fired for his religious beliefs. Geocities removed the site in October 2004 after a ] violation was filed. | |||
*In June 2005, Elan Vital Inc., USA, sent a letter under the Digital Copyright Millenium, Act to the hosts of prem-rawat-maharaji.info claiming that photographs shown pages on the site violated Elan Vital's copyright. Elan Vital did not attempt to remove the text of those webpages or stop webmaster John Brauns from voicing his opinion. Elan Vital declined to pursue their claims when Brauns admitted being legally responsible for the web page and sent a counter-notification . Brauns is also the webmaster of several other Ex-Premie webpages. | |||
==Criticism by protagonists of the anticult movement== | |||
In the early ] the late ], a controversial ], included the DLM (since renamed ]) in her list of ]s. Criticism by the anti-cult movement has diminished over the course of time but has not disappeared. The ] activist ] and controversial anti-cult activists and former ] ] and ] list links about Elan Vital on their websites.{{ref|anticult}} | |||
==Criticism and observations in several scholarly articles== | |||
The psychiatrist Saul V. Levine, who published several articles about cults and new religious movements, wrote in a undated article titled ''Life in Cults'' published in a 1989 book that he believed that public perception saw the ] the ], ], ] as cults held in low esteem. He writes that ''" in the Divine Light Mission, members are expected to turn over all material possessions and earnings to the religion and to abstain from alcohol, tobacco meat, and sex"'' His analysis was based on practices, such as the monastic life in ashrams, that were abandoned in the 1980's when Prem Rawat threw off anachronistic Hindu religious and cultural trappings previously associated with his message. See ]. | |||
Jan van der Lans, a professor in ] at the ], wrote in a book about followers of gurus commissioned by the KSGV, a Netherlands based , published in ], that Maharaji is an example of a guru who has become a charlatan leading a double life: on the one hand, he tried to remain loyal to the role in which he was forced and to the expectations of his followers, on the other hand, his private life was one of idleness and pleasure, which was only known to small circle of insiders. According to van der Lans, one could consider him either a fraud or a victim of his surroundings. Van der Lans treated several gurus but was only critical about Rawat, but does not provided citations for his very critical assessment. | |||
Dr. Paul Schnabel, a sociologist at the Erasmus University in Rotterdam, citing Van der Lans, wrote that that the message of the ] could be summarized on the person of Guru Maharaj Ji, in which divine love and truth are manifested, and that by completely surrendering oneself to the guru or perfect master (the revealer of that truth and love), one can be a part of it. | |||
Professor ] refers for more information about the DLM to an article written by Winn Haan that was published in the official magazine about religious movements of the ] in ]. Wim Haan, a member of a critical movement within the ] wrote this article while he was a student of theology at a Pastoral and Theology school in a small town in the Netherlands. In that article, based on his involvement with the DLM during two years in the Netherlands, he asserts that Rawat’s battle against the mind sometimes degenerated in complete irrationality, that sometimes ]s branded every criticism and objective approach as "mind", and that they often avoided discussions with outsiders because these discussions could possibly stimulate the mind. See also ]. | |||
The Dutch religious scholar and Christian reverend] wrote in a 1982 article about the DLM that "''in Maharaj ji's satsangs one can notice a speaking style that resembles very much some Christian evangelization campaigns: a pressing request, an emphasis on the last possibility to choose before it is too late and a terminology in which one is requested to surrender to the Lord, in this case Maharaj ji himself. The contents of the message is not Christian, though.''" . He also describes his impression that the person of Maharaj ji became more central in the course of years and his assertions about himself and his vocation goes further, as he become more aware of the extent of his divinity. He also writes that when Christians get into dialogue with premies that the life style of the guru is of great importance. He argued that a ], who drives in expensive cars, who owns a big yacht may not be a problem for premies, but it is a problem for Christians and that they should ask premies why Maharaj ji does not live what he considers to be a normal and simple life. | |||
The sociologists Foss and Larkin wrote in 1978 that the DLM "emphasized formal structure without substantive content." The religious scholar Dr. ] who is a student of Rawat accused them in response of bias, pointing to the number of students that were attracted to the DLM. {{ref|Geaves}} | |||
==References == | |||
*{{note|eporg}} website (Retrieved September 2005) | |||
*{{note|faq_au}} | |||
*{{note|JMG_affidavit}} | |||
*{{note|RStonesMag}} Rolling Stone Magazine, ''The Seventies: A Tumultuous Decade Reconsidered'' (200) p.102. Little, Brown and Company - ISBN: 0316815470 | |||
*{{note|NYRB}} du Plessix Gray, Francine, ''Blissing Out in Houston'' . The New York Review of Books. Volume 20, Number 20, December 13, 1973 | |||
*{{note|ICANN1} ICANN registry information (Retrieved September 2005) | |||
*{{note|jb_websites}} (Retrieved Aug 2005) | |||
*{{note|faq_opp1}} FAQs (Retrieved Aug 2005) | |||
*{{note|apost}} Accounts attributed to Michael Dettmers , Mike Donner and radio interview by Bob Mishler - (Retrieved Sept 2005) | |||
*{{note|tprf_pr}} (Retrieved Sept 2005) | |||
*{{note|money}} , (Retrieved Sept 2005) | |||
*{{note|acropolis}}] - paper delivered at the 1997 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Religion, San Francisco, November 23, 1997. | |||
*{{note|ackland}} PDF (Retrieved Sept 2005) | |||
*{{note|porno}} Elan Vital FAQ (Retrieved Sept 2005) | |||
*{{note|anticult}} , and pages and links on Elan Vital (Retrieved Sept 2005) | |||
*{{note|scattini}} (Retrieved Feb 2005) | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
*Benschop, Albert. Social & Behavioral Sciences/Media Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands. | |||
*Barrett, David. V. ''The New Believers - A survey of sects, cults and alternative religions'' 2001 UK, Cassell & Co ISBN 0-304-35592-92-5 pages 65, 305-329 | |||
*Cameron, Charles. ''Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji?'', 1973, Bantam Books - Presented as an authorized biography by followers. | |||
*Dupertuis, L. (1986) ''How people recognize charisma: the case of darshan in Radhasoami and Divine Light Mission''. Sociological Analysis, 47, Page 111-124. University of Guam | |||
*Elliot, M. E. (1999). - research paper by a student of the late ] of the ] | |||
*Turner, Nancy , International Association of Chiefs of Police - Responding to Hate Crimes: A Police Officer's Guide to Investigation and Prevention. | |||
*Haan, Wim (Dutch language) ''De missie van het Goddelijk licht van goeroe Maharaj Ji: een subjektieve duiding'' from the series ''Religieuze bewegingen in Nederland: Feiten en Visies'' nr. 3, autumn 1981. ISBN 90-242-2341-5 (Based mainly on the Dutch branch of the Divine Light Mission.) ''Note: Haan was part of a critical movement within the catholic church'' | |||
*Introvigne, Massimo. - paper delivered at the 1999 Annual Conference of the Association for Sociology of Religion, Chicago, Illinois, August 5, 1999. | |||
*] ''From slogans to mantras: social protest and religious conversion in the late Vietnam war era'' ] press ISBN 0-8156-2923-0 (2001) | |||
* (Dutch language) page 117, written upon request for the published by Ambo, Baarn, ] ISBN 9026305214 | |||
* ] Dr. (1982) ''Oosterse Geloofsbewegingen in het Westen/Eastern faith movements in the West'' (Dutch language) ISBN 9021049651 | |||
*] and Lewis, R. James, Institute for the Study of the American Religion (ISAR) (1993). Department of the USA Army, Office of the Chief of Chaplains. | |||
*Melton, J. Gordon. ''Encyclopedia of American Religions, 7th edition'' ISBN 0-7876-6384-0 - page 1055 | |||
* (Dutch language) ''Between stigma and charisma: new religious movements and mental health'' ], Faculty of Medicine, Ph.D. thesis, ISBN 90-6001-746-3 (Deventer, Van Loghum Slaterus, 1982), Chapter II, page 33 | |||
*Levine, Saul V. ''Life in the Cults'', article that appeared in the book edited by Marc Galanter ], (1989), ''Cults and new religious movements: a report of the committee on psychiatry and religion of the ]'', ISBN 0-89042-212-5 | |||
==External links== | |||
===Critic's websites=== | |||
====Ex-premie group websites==== | |||
* - website critical of Prem Rawat and the organizations that support his work. Owned by John Brauns | |||
* Information about Prem Rawat written by former followers, Owned by John Brauns | |||
* Owned by John Brauns | |||
* critique of the current promotional activities pursued by Prem Rawat and related organisations | |||
====Other ex-followers websites==== | |||
* - ex-follower after thirty years as a follower | |||
* - pseudonymously maintained website critical of Prem Rawat | |||
* (anonymous author and owner) (see: ]) | |||
===FAQs related to critics published by organizations related to Prem Rawat=== | |||
* - Related FAQs published by Elan Vital in the UK. | |||
* - makes reference to the Gubler-Macgregor case | |||
===Sites responding to critics=== | |||
* website critical of ex-premies | |||
* | |||
{{Prem_Rawat}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
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