Child Abuse
Child Abuse
SITES??? MERCI
POR FAVOR CONOCEIS A ESTOS
SITIOS??? GRACIAS
BITTE KENNEN SIE DIESEN WEB
SITE??? DANKE
PLEASE DO YOU KNOW THESE WEB
SITES??? THANX
especially this one is from the "family" Mo's brotherhood:
http://www.thefamily.org/dossier/legal/spain.htm
Is it alright?
http://www.movingon.org/category.asp?sID=1&Cat=10
Related Links
Child Abuse Lawsuit -- A $400 Million Lawsuit was Filed by Former SGAs Against ISKCON (Hare
Krishna) For Child Abuse on June 12, 2000.
Children Flogged for God -- An assortment of religious groups who believe in beating children for
God.
In the Family: sexual abuse -- Statements from teenagers and young adults under oath of sexual
abuse in the Family, summarised by the Rt. Hon. Lord Justice Ward
In the Family: Teen Training -- An article from a Sociology Prof. on the detention programs in the
Family.
In the Shadow of the Moons : My Life in the Reverend Sun Myung Moon's Family -- Book, written
by a young woman who grew up in the Moonies and became a 15-year-old bride handpicked by the
Reverend Sun Myung Moon for his son. Link is to Amazon.com
Information on the cult of Maharaj Ji -- site for people recovering from being involved in the cult of
Guru Maharaj Ji/Prem Pal/Rawatt. Followers and their children have suffered abuse and deception,
many are still recovering, some have committed suicide, and it's all been ignored or hushed up by the
organisation (Divine Light Mission/DUO/Elan Vital/Enjoying Life.)
Tax-Exempt child abuse -- Accounts (mostly from former FGA) of child mistreatment in Scientology
The cult next door: Teen shares chilling tale of alleged abuse inside the Twelve Tribes sect --
From the Boston Herald, Sep. 4, 2001
http://www.nhne.com/specialreports/srsaibaba.html
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
INTRODUCTION
David Sunfellow
MY SAI HISTORY
Jed Geyerhahn
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
INTRODUCTION
By David Sunfellow
In SMORGASBORD 6, I wrote an article entitled, "A Power Greater Than Ourselves". Among other
things, the article lamented the apparent lack of authentic spiritual masters in the world today. "I have
yet to meet or hear of anyone alive today," I wrote, "who embodies the kind of perfection I believe is
our birthright. And while there is certainly no shortage of people claiming to be perfect, those who
proclaim spiritual mastership the loudest, often turn out to be the least developed and most lost. And
this includes many of the eastern world's most celebrated 'masters' who, along with whatever genuine
inner strengths and powers they tapped into, frequently demonstrate glaring moral defects and/or an
inability to function gracefully in the real world."
While many readers wrote back saying that they, too, had grown disillusioned over the apparent lack
of spiritual masters in the world today, one reader asked a question that has been nagging me for
decades: "What about Sai Baba?"
I first encountered Sai Baba over twenty years ago when a friend showed me a book of his. After
reading that Sai Baba considered himself the second coming of Christ, I promptly dismissed both him
and his claims of spiritual mastership. Eventually, I came across a psychic reading done by Ray
Stanford (one of a handful of psychics that I believe was genuinely gifted), in which Sai Baba was
described as "an avatar of mind unspiritualized." This particular reading, which was published in 1976
in the Journal of the ASSOCIATION FOR THE UNDERSTANDING OF MAN, further accused Sai
Baba of sexual indiscretions and said that he had physically beat people who did not do his will.
According to the Stanford source, "There is a direct contradiction in the life of the individual involved,
between what he claims of himself and what he does in practice. This is exemplified in the sexual life,
in the intellectual life, and in the emotional reactions of the individual called Baba. Also is it exemplified
in the external form of those attitudes mentioned -- such as the physical beatings which that one has
done to individuals who did not do his will."
The Stanford source also added this pointed reminder,"Realize that He who is the true incarnation of
Love gives evidence of Himself by love. Do not deceive yourself by rationalization into believing that
the giving of trinkets is the evidence of love, for love given purely need not conceal itself behind mere
trinkets of gold, stone, and tinsel."
While I viewed Sai Baba as one more wayward guru, an increasing number of friends continued to
sing him praises. Some of these friends actually visited him in India. Their first-person impression of
Sai Baba was that he was, indeed, the high-powered spiritual master he claimed to be. Others, who
spent years in close association with Sai Baba, swore that they personally witnessed many "miracles"
that could not be explained by ordinary means. In addition, Sai Baba is well-known in India, and often
visited by Indian government officials and world leaders -- in part because of his supposed powers,
and in part because of his reported good works, which, among other things, includes building hospitals
and helping poor villages.
To get to the bottom of this, I contacted officials connected with THE COMMITTEE FOR THE
SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATION OF CLAIMS OF THE PARANORMAL (CSICOP), based in the United
States, India and London. One of these gentlemen, G.R.R. Babu, the Executive Director of
INTERNATIONAL HUMANIST & ETHICAL UNION in London, faxed me an article he wrote that
itemized many disturbing events associated with Sai Baba, including faked materializations, murders,
corrupt government officials, money laundering, and other scandals. Since CSIOP and their affiliate
organizations are staunch humanists, they have a vested interest to discredit all claims of supernatural
and/or divine interventions in the affairs of humanity. Babu's report cannot, therefore, be viewed as an
objective overview of Sai Baba. In addition, Babu's article has a sarcastic edge to it that compromises
normal journalistic standards. It does, however, detail events that should cause any seeking person to
seriously question Sai Baba, as well his claims of mastership. With permission, I have included a copy
of Babu's report on Sai Baba in this NHNE Special Report.
I have also been in touch with Jed Geyerhahn, a past devotee of Sai Baba. With his permission, I have
included a letter that describes his relationship with Sai Baba. Previously published on THE NEURAL
SURFER (http://www.mtsac.edu/~dlane/saiessay.html), Geyerhahn's letter supports and elaborates on
the accusations presented in Babu's eye-opening overview.
While Sai Baba may not live up to his "perfect master" billing, it is worth noting that many of the people
who have been drawn to Sai Baba are sincere spiritual seekers. As David Lane, the creator of THE
NEURAL SURFER points out in picking Sai Baba as one of his top ten "Scum Bag Guru's"
(http://www.mtsac.edu/~dlane/gurumay.html), "I hesitated putting this Gumby blessing Avatar on my
list for over a year because his followers can be (at times) so downright sweet."
Being a sincere, even a "sweet" spiritual seeker is, of course, no guarantee we won't be duped.
Indeed, some of the most sincere, sweet, and discerning spiritual seekers I know were reeled in by Sai
Baba -- or his devotees. But as increasing numbers of spiritual seekers mature, and our global
network of ears and eyes expands, I believe it is going to be increasingly difficult for the Sai Baba's of
the world to work their magic on those of us that really want to know the truth...
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
By G.R.R. BABU
General Secretary,
RATIONALIST ASSOCIATION OF INDIA
Despite His omniscience, Satyanorayana Raju -- for that was his given name -- went to school where
the playful display of his miraculous powers was soon recognized by all. Friends came to love him for
his magically created gifts and teachers feared his just wrath: one of them would not come unstuck
from his chair, unless he begged for forgiveness and expressed remorse at ill treating the children! In
1940, after tortuous treatment by doctors for suspected mental illness, at the age of 15,
Satyanarayana Raju revealed His avatarhood to the world and identified Himself as Satya Sai Baba.
As He was to reveal later to his disciples, "I, the Lord, incarnated at Puttaparthi. Buddha, Christ,
Mohammed and others were not avatars. They had some divine power... My power is infinite; My
Truth is inexplicable, even unfathomable. My task is the regeneration of humanity by Truth and Love."
We are reassured that when the present incarnation would be over at age 96, in the year 2022, He
would be reborn as Prema Sai in Mandya district of Kamataka.
MAN OF MIRACLES
Satya Sai Baba would often say "miracles are my visiting cards": a phrase which is also the title of a
largely hearsay, cock-and-bull account of Satya Sai Baba's paranormal powers, by Icelandic
parapsychologist Errlelndur Haraldsson (more about Haraldsson at the end of this article). Despite His
insistence that His religious message was more important than the "tinsel" miracles He performed, the
stupendous "powers" of Satya Sai Baba soon came to be know all over the world. Based on the "most
reliable information", but mistaking God for guru, the READER'S DIGEST book Strange Stories,
Amazing Facts - II gives us this credulous account: "Sai Baba is an Indian guru blessed with
extraordinary powers. He can produce gold rings and coins out of thin air, change rock into candy, and
flowers into jewels. He heals the sick with the aid of vibhuti (sacred wood ash), which seems to appear
from nowhere as he waves his hand. Perhaps the most astonishing display of Sai Baba's powers took
place in 1953, when the blue and stiff body of Radhakrishna which was cold, shrunken and starting to
decompose, was brought back to life by Baba. In the 50 years that Sai Baba has been demonstrating
his apparently miraculous powers, no one has found any evidence of trickery."
In addition to these reports, Dr. John Hislop, American industrialist and management consultant, and
also Chairman of the CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICAN SAI ORGANIZATION tells us earnestly
how in 1971 Satya Sai Baba resurrected Walter Cowan, declared dead due to cardiac failure. The late
Dr. Suri Bhagavantam, director of the prestigious INDIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE, Bangalore,
Scientific advisor to the government of India and also Baba's interpreter narrated how once Satya Sai
Baba created out of nowhere a copy of the Bhagavadgita (alas even the Lord is not immune to
orthographic error, as a skeptic pointed out!) In a contemporary enactment of New Testament
miracles, He once converted water into petrol by dipping His finger into the water. He relieves
devotees' ailments by taking them onto Himself, conducts surgeries with psychic powers and plucks
out-of-season mango fruit from tamarind trees. It is believed that Baba was responsible for repelling
the Chinese army "invading India like locusts". Reports abound of His bilocation (having appeared in
two places at the same time); He Himself claimed that He never sleeps.
In what can only be described as divine disapproval of capitalist claims on intellectual property rights,
by the mere waving of His hand, Satya Sai Baba also "creates" and distributes trade mark protected
Parker pens and Omega watches. The vibhuti He creates has been variously used by devotees in
treating terminal cancer and for curing pimples. The irreverent skeptic is admonished: "Do not try to
delve into Me; Baba is beyond the keenest intellect, the sharpest brain... How can the limited know the
depth of the unlimited? How can the ant delve into the mountain? It is beyond you to know how or why
I create things... the objects that I create, I create them by My Will, the same way I created the
universe. Develop faith and veneration and derive joy through Prema (love). That is the utmost you
can do, do that and benefit."
Sai Baba's exhortation to believe has found many receptive ears. Today His followers number at least
two million, with growing numbers being recorded in the spiritually-impoverished West. Australian
journalist and theosophist Howard Murphet and London photographer David Baily came to scoff, but
stayed to pray. "Noted" American psychologist Dr. Samuel Sandweiss was convinced when he was
told, "I am everything, everywhere, omniscient, omnipotent, and so whatever I will, instantly happens."
Dr. Hislop asks in tragically foolish wonder, "Baba has the inconceivably immense task of the
Universe. How can He afford to spend time talking to people like us?" Baba reassures him: "Baba with
his limitless bodies, is everywhere doing the tasks... that is Baba's omnipresence. God is not subject
to any limitation." Dr. Hislop is delighted at this explanation.
The credit for polishing Baba's halting English and capturing his evident lyrical derangement goes to
official biographer, the erudite Kasturi: "I am all that is, all that can be known, all that seeks fulfillment.
Sunrise and Sunset keep repeating, for I have willed [them] to; the stars that lend sublime charm to the
nocturnal sky hide their faces from human eyes during the day, in obedience to my desire; the wind
blows with no respite in order to keep animate beings alive, since that is My wish; streams and rivulets
giggle, laugh or roar along beds during their pilgrimages to the sea, for it pleases Me; mankind itself is
molded into a million faces to present the variety I relish." This has obviously enlightened the person
from whom I borrowed some Satya Sai Baba literature: he had written down in pencil, in fervent
devotion: "I, befitting and fortunate slave, carry out every command of the master without any question
of why and what... I am slave of the master who has released me from my ignorance, whatever my
master does is of the greatest benefit to all concerned."
The confederacy of irrationality, gullibility and superstition establishes a kinship which transcends
cultural and national barriers. Among the miracle mongering Satya Sai followers are top Indian political
leaders and judges, Presidents and Prime Ministers of Sri Lanka, Maldives, Mauritius, several former
Greek Prime Ministers, the Spanish Royal family, members of the International diplomatic corps,
advocates, engineers, doctors and common folk. Perhaps because it is they who need the most
spiritual advice, it is very common to see the pacific and teetotaler Satya Sai Baba in the company of
power brokers, associates of international arms traders and liquor barons. Notable among Baba's
international inner circle are Guilio Andreotti, former Prime Minister of Italy, currently on trial for murder
of a journalist, former Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi, sentenced to 5 1/2 years of imprisonment for
corruption and Princess Poihlavi, sister of the former Shah of Iran, caught in Switzerland in 1962 for
carrying heroin.
Into such a community of God-fearing people came the late Srilankan Dr. Abraham T. Kovoor, Asian
president of the WORLD UNION OF FREE THINKERS and Dr. H. Narasimhaiah, India's best known
rationalist and former vice chancellor of the BANGALORE UNIVERSITY, who together led the most
animated attack on Satya Sai Baba and his world view.
Dr. Kovoor narrates in his book Begone Godmen! that in 1973, during a newspaper debate on Satya
Sai Baba, Dr. Bhagavantam (Baba's interpreter from Telugu to English) wrote of the "awe-inspiring,
wonderful experience of the Seiko watch manufacturer", who, when on a visit to Puttaparth was
presented by Sai Baba with the very watch that the manufacturer had, pending tests, kept in a safe in
Japan. With this materialization, all his doubts about the divine powers of Satya Sai Baba melted
away. "He fell prostrate at Sai Baba's feet and worshipped him. Since then he is an ardent devotee of
the Bhagavon." Since Dr. Sbhagavantam was not forth coming with details, a suspicious Dr. Kovoor
made inquiries with Shoji Hattori, President of SEIKO WATCH COMPANY in Tokyo to verify the facts.
Mr. Hattori wrote back "...I am in no way able to further your knowledge as regards the man mentioned
in your letter, Mr. Sai Baba. Neither I nor any members of my staff have ever made the acquaintance
of this individual. I am sure that these reports are completely unfounded." Bhagavantam remained
silent when confronted with the response.
The national scandal that broke out when Dr. Kovoor released his correspondence to the press,
describing Satya Sai Baba as a "sleight-of-hand" trickster and exposing one of India's brilliant
scientists as a Satya Sai agent, was only surpassed by nuclear scientist, Dr. H. Narosimhaiah's
crusade as Vice-Chancellor of BANGALORE UNIVERSITY, when in 1976 he appointed a 12 member
official committee "to investigate rationally and scientifically miracles and any other verifiable
superstitions." Dr. Narasimhaiah's committee exposed Sai Krishna, a 7 year old child-protege of Satya
Sai Baba, by pulling out the packet of vibhuti hidden in the underclothes of Sai Krishna. Several
sundry godmen immediately confessed that they did not have any miraculous powers. It was Satya
Sai Baba's turn now and the committee requested Him to allow them an investigation. When they
visited Him, a terrified Satya Sai Baba locked Himself up in His Whitefield residence, close to
Bangalore. All He could do was spew helpless vitriol at the Narasimhaiah Committee.
As if these resounding rationalist responses and public humiliations were not enough, in 1976 another
bomb shell was thrown at Him. Tal Brooke, born again Christian who spent 14 months with Satya Sai
Baba, wrote the book Avatar of the Night, (all three thousand copies of the book released in India were
purchased and destroyed) describing Satya Sai Baba's homosexual lust (how can a good Christian
accept that?) and assaults on young boys. It is quite revealing of the submission and intelligence level
of the Sai devotee that despite Sai Baba's enticement: "What is mine is yours, money, food, anything.
Just ask!", Tal Brooke said to himself "Lust contradicts Baba's nature; therefore it does not exist in
him. Blind faith... Baba is innocent". It took Tal Brooke three such consummate encounters and
numerous similar accounts of pedophilia from friends to realize that Satya Sai Baba's nudging pelvis,
pawing hands and intimate behaviour were not part of any soul-cleansing encounter.
With news of these events and later incidents, the seeds of doubt were sown in many minds. How is it
that Sai Baba's own brother-in-law died of rabies? Why did Baba, Himself a psychic surgeon, have to
be hospitalized for ruptured appendicitis and broken leg? And preaching simplicity, why does He travel
in Mercedes cars and require heavy protection? Why did Sai Baba have to wave his hand in circles,
before producing anything? Was it because of prestidigitation, as emphatically asserted by the
renowned Indian stage magician P.C. Sarcar Jr. and skeptic E. Premanand? Does His occasional
transvestism and derision for women really illustrate the Male-Female principle of the universe? Why
is it that some doctors have gone on record stating that post mortems of bodies of several women
coming from Puttapathl showed signs of torture? Is it true that some of the foreign nationals visiting
Puttaparthl were disappearing after entire properties were bequeathed to the Satya Sai Organization?
And is it true that Proshanti Nilayam (Satya Sai Baba's "abode of peace" at Puttaparthl) was the
campus of criminals? Is it not surprising that the police, in a routine security combing of Prashanti
Nilayam before the visit of the Home Minister of India, discover, apart from cyanide and land mines,
the deadly plastic-explosive RDX used by Hindu-Muslim terrorists in Bombay? And why did Satya Sai
Baba, whose religion officially also embraces the values of Islam, welcome the anti-Muslim Hindu
fundamentalist Vishwa Hindu Parishad's campaign?
But the most spectacular fodder for doubt for the believer was the unique birthday gift given to Satya
Sai Baba by the DECCAN CHRONICLE of 23 November, 1992. This largely circulated, Hyderabad-
based English daily published what the rationalist could only dream of. Splashed on the front page
were pictures from a video recording of Satya Sai Baba's "creation" of a gold necklace, in the
presence of the Prime Minister of India, Mr. P.V. Narasimha Rao. The video tape shows
unambiguously Satya Sai Baba being passed clandestinely a necklace by his personal assistant
Radhakrishna Menon, which later Satya Sai Baba "materializes" after a wave of his hand. Filmed by a
state television crew covering the Prime Minister, the cassette was suppressed. However, a copy was
leaked and several copies of the cassette were distributed in India and abroad. A big meeting was
organized by us to felicitate the courageous journalist Venu Kodimela and for a long time, watching the
cassette became a necessary ritual of all our public meetings. Some were shown on local and district
cable television too -- at great bodily risk as some rationalists came to know. However, the publicity
remarkably affected the number of devotees visiting Puttaparthi, though some still insist that "miracles"
are performed to attract people to the good work being done by Baba and that Baba never claimed
any special powers!
CRIME AND KARMA:
MURDERS IN THE BEDROOM
Much worse was in store when on 6 June, 1993, six inmates of Prashanti Nilayam were murdered in
Satya Sai Baba's bedroom. It is alleged that two were killed by the assailants and the police claimed to
have shot dead -- in self defence -- four of the assailants, who were armed only with knives. Realizing
the danger to his person, Baba Himself ran for His life, jumped out of an open window and started off a
secret alarm, whose existence even the inner core did not know of. Interestingly, all the people killed
were part of the inner circle of Sai Baba, among whom Radha Krishna Menon, the personal assistant
who was caught on video passing the necklace clandestinely to Baba. Baba Himself spoke of the
murders in His Gurupoornima lecture and dealt with the question of whether the deaths of his near and
dear were unavoidable. "Birth and death go together. One should realize that death is a natural
phenomenon and avoid worrying about it... You must note that Swami's life is in His own hands and
not in those of anyone else. If I will it, I can live as long as I please. Because He is the almighty, God
cannot behave in any arbitrary manner. Not realizing this truth, men who are involved in worldly ways
ask questions as to why in certain situations, God did not use his limitless powers to avert certain
untoward events..."
The police report was twice changed, from attempt to murder Baba to internal squabbles in Prashanti
Nilayam. Mysteriously, Shankar Dayal Sharma, the President of the Indian Republic deviated from
protocol and propriety and said that the murders were "all about a girl". When asked why Satya Sai
Baba, the head of the Institution in whose bedroom the murders took place, was not interrogated,
Home Minister Chavan who visited Sai Baba twice immediately after the incident insisted that Sai
Baba was not present at the time of murder, further compromising the investigation. Surprisingly,
Prashanti Nilayam authorities themselves filed no police complaint.
B. Premanand, magician, former devotee of Baba and today the most important Indian Skeptic -- Sai
Baba baiter alive, however refused to accept the interference into the investigation and hauled the
government to court, accusing the police of having willfully destroyed evidence. Amusingly, in the post,
Premanand and K.N. Balagopal, rationalist advocate in the Supreme Court of India, had dragged
Satya Sai Baba to court for violation of the Gold Control Act which imposed restrictions on the
"manufacture, possession, sale and transfer of gold", since Satya Sai Baba "materialized" gold
ornaments to be given to devotees. While rejecting the petition, the High Court Judge Justice Y.V.
Anjaneyulu, a member of the Satya Sai inner circle, allowed the argument that an article materialized
by spiritual powers cannot be said to have been manufactured, prepared or processed. Perhaps for
the first time in jurisprudence spiritual powers were recognized as valid defence in law!
In the present murder case, however, Premanand petitioned to the High Court in a public interest
petition that the case be transferred to an impartial investigative agency so that justice might be done.
In the High Court, while dismissing the plea, Premanand was admonished by Chief Justice Mishra,
who even threatened to punish him the next time he "misused" the Court with such complaints, with
the intention of defaming Satya Sai Baba. In January, the SUPREME COURT OF INDIA expunged all
the remarks made by the High Court Judge, boasting rationalist morale. Also, chastened by the
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA, in the first week of May the HIGH COURT OF ANDHRA PRADESH
STATE admitted a contempt of Court petition by Premanand against the government and the police.
Premanand and Satya Sai Baba have been brought to the front pages of news papers again. The
judicial mood in India is remarkably different since the past few months, what with the INDIAN
SUPREME COURT taking up an "operation clean hands", arresting several corrupt politicians and
also forcing the Indian Prime Minister Narasimha Rao to arrest his favorite Godman and arms dealer-
power broker Chandraswami in the first week of May. Rationalists keep their fingers crossed...
In the Marathi language weekly LOK PRABHA, of 19 January, 1996, was published a most shocking
account concerning the SATYA SAI INSTITUTE OF HIGHER MEDICAL SCIENCES, set up at an
expense of 2000 million Indian rupees and where all medical treatment is done free. Triambak
Karvande, a peasant from Latur district of Maharastra was to have received his son Balaji's kidney in a
transplant operation. A week after the operation, a dying Triambak was informed that the transplant
was a failure and father and son were sent back home. Back in their town, two CT scans and a
sonography done by Dr. Kastur of the MAHARASTRA INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES AND
RESEARCH CENTRE revealed that Triambak was never operated for a kidney transplant, the scans
also confirmed that Balaji's kidney was indeed taken out of his body. So where did Balaji's kidney go?
Is the hospital -- with a hitherto very good reputation -- in fact a part of the international organ theft
business? Initial complaints made by the victim went unheeded , but the MAHARASTRA
SUPERSTITION ERADICATION COMMITTEE, after its own independent investigation, is working on
helping the Karvande family get legal aid. The Truth might be out soon.
B. Premanand, also advisor on miracle exposure to the RATIONALIST ASSOCIATION OF INDIA and
editor of INDIAN SKEPTIC, estimates the Sai Empire to be worth 60000 million rupees (1714 million
USD). Puttaparthi now has an airport and 3000 small apartments are available for rentals to
accommodate the cash-rich Americans, Scandinavians, Belgians, Germans, Dutch, Malaysians and
Japanese who come. Prashanti Nilayam itself has adequate infrastructure to feed 10,000 people at
one time. To have an idea of the scale of operations, consider the fact that in 1982, the target of the
SATYA SAI ORGANIZATION was adoption of 6000 villages, to "fulfill all the physical and spiritual
needs of the community". There are 3000 Satya Sai centres in India and 400 centres abroad in 85
countries and they publicize and market the fact that more than 100, 000 children are taught free in
centres run by SRI SATYA SAI BAL VIKAS TRUST and do propaganda about their social service
activities. UNION BANK OF INDIA, owned by the state, does not charge any fee for money transfer to
Satya Sai Baba and the money keeps flowing.
When Satya Sai Baba celebrated his 70th birthday in November, '95, the President and the Prime
Minister of India were in attendance and applauded the SATYA SAI WATER SCHEME meant to
provide drinking water to every village of the dry district of Ananthapur. It is a matter of detail that five
months after the inauguration, water is yet to flow from village taps, as tanks have crashed and pipes
burst because of inferior construction material used due to corruption. Importantly, this is an instance
of how when governments default in their duties, religious organizations occupy that space. On this
single birthday, a little known foundation from America and another from Japan donated 1600 million
Indian rupees (45 million US Dollars) for the Satya Sai charity work. Premanand is investigating
whether this is in fact a money laundering operation.
A look into the world view of high-school dropout Satya Sai Baba should help clarify why His style of
philanthropy and education must be combated: "At the centre (of the world), everything is liquid.
Everything is melted. No temperature. Everything is liquid, like water. Gold, iron, silver all are liquid.
Next there is solid. Then trees. Then human beings and animals. At the very centre is the divine. It is
the support of everything. First is liquid, chemistry. Then solid, physics. Then trees, Botany. Then man,
the pinnacle of life. But at the centre, supporting all, is the divine. Without the divine, where is
chemistry, physics, botany? Like this will be the teaching of all courses at the university." A few years
ago, the SATYA SAI INSTITUTE OF HIGHER LEARNING has been declared a deemed University by
Madhuri Shah, devotee and Chairperson of the UNIVERSITY GRANTS COMMISSION, on par with
the rest of India's Centres of Higher Learning!
Alas, news of philanthropy in poor countries drowns out rational discourse. Sadly, Indians are still
racists, and when pale face comes and approves, there is little else to doubt. State Radio & Television
do propaganda for him. Journalists are either gullible or are on payroll. Judges are at times prone to
decide based on personal beliefs: the situation is worsened by the political patronage received (Sai
Baba's influence increased manifold ever since superstitious Narasimha Rao and his cabinet retire
and President Sankar Dayal Sharma started visiting Him even in their official capacity). And in India,
criminal and political identities overlap. Scientists, advocates and intellectuals mislead the others and
set examples by their own mistaken devotion for this modern Tartuffe. Many well meaning people --
and there are many such among the Satya Sai Baba followers and admirers -- fail to realize that
philanthropy is merely an investment in the Satya Sai Baba cult and empire and a way of evading tax.
Thanks to the intellectuals and the common man's willful suspension of disbelief and critical faculties,
the Satya Sai octopus has been able to spread its tentacles far and wide with the lure of miracles.
Dr. Narasimhaiah said to me in Bangalore once that our work is like that of Sisyphus. It does not
matter even if the SUPREME COURT puts Satya Sai Baba on trial. Our work has to continue: after
working to expose Bala Sai Baba in the year 2022 we might still be busy with Prema Sai...
------------
Dr. Haraldsson's repeated requests for controlled experiments were firmly rejected by Satya Sai Baba
and his team was asked "not to pester" Baba with more requests. Charmed by the charisma of Baba
and more predisposed to believe than to investigate, Dr. Haraldsson settles for his own inefficient and
subjective-personal-informal observation as well as hearsay accounts from devotees. Yet, in their
article, The Appearance and Disappearance of Objects in the Presence of Sri Sathya Sai Baba in the
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH Vol. 71, January, 1977,
Haraldsson and Karlis Osis express their gratitude to Sri Satya Sai Baba "for his kind co-operation in
their investigation"!
Dr. Haraldsson's book does not indicate that he is aware of Satya Sai Baba's father's brother being a
tantrik-conjuror. He could perhaps have been Satya Sai's teacher. Despite assuring us that he "tried
his very best" to trace all critical rumours about Sai Baba, in the chapter titled "Critics" only Dr. H.
Narasimhaiah is mentioned. No mention of Dr. Kovoor's whirlwind tours of Andhra, his challenges to
Satya Sai Baba, his largely attended public meetings (30,000 people for instance) to the
accompaniment of stupendous publicity! Contributors to the national debates in the then prestigious
ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY of India, and the tabloids BLITZ and CURRENT WEEKLY are ignored.
Interestingly, Dr. Haraldsson is unaware even of the Seiko watch controversy. Later, he says that he
was unwilling to take it up because of the various versions of it! One has not heard of an
"investigative" researcher shy away on such dubious grounds.
Nor does Haraldsson mention Satya Sai Baba specialist B. Premanand, whose first book in English on
Baba, Lure of Miracles, was published in 1976. Dr. Haraldsson's excuse on 6 April, 1988 to Dale
Bayerstein, editor of the excellent 1994 book, Sai Baba's Miracles: An Overview is that no one in India
mentioned Premanand to him. Dr. Haraldsson writes in his letter of 21 October, 1988 to Dale
Bayerstein that Dr. H. Narasimhaiah did not think it worthwhile for him to visit Premanand. When
informed of this, Dr. Narasimhaiah issued a written clarification that he respected Premanand's work
and could never have said what Haraldsson reported. This is not the only complaint of misquoting
about Haraldsson. Two chapters of the book Miracles are My Visiting Cards are devoted to M. Krishna
and Varadu (in no way critics, looking at the contents of the book), former personal assistants to Satya
Sai Baba in the earlier days; Krishna converted to Christianity later. Now, Mr. Krishna's son, a good
friend of mine, insists that I report his late father's intense displeasure with the way in which Dr.
Haraldsson blocked out some of the things told to him and in the manner in which some statements
were transformed to suit Dr. Haraldsson's purposes. In an interview with me and Premanand, P.V.N.
Nair, editor of DECCAN CHRONICLE, whom Haraldsson accused of misquoting him as saying that he
was "disappointed with Satya Sai Baba", regretted that out of good faith he had not tape recorded the
interview. Premanand has shown how different versions and sequences of the same event (production
of ring for Karlis Osis) have been written by Haraldsson. When Premanand asked for clarification and
explanation in an undoubtedly long questionnaire, the very prolific Dr. Haraldsson suddenly has no
time to write!
Haraldsson is aware that propaganda of the claimed resurrection from death of Walter Cowan and
Radhakrishna had the support of Satya Sai Baba. He is also aware that Dr. Fanibunda, himself a
medical doctor, testified to the resurrection of Cowan. Haraldsson's own conclusion is that the stories
of resurrections are false. Yet, to our scientist-investigator the role of Satya Sai Baba is not suspect.
Nor that of Dr. Fanibunda, whose testimony he approvingly uses in another case. It also does not
occur to this impartial investigator, forever solicitous of being scientific and objective that since he
himself has found some stories to be false, he has necessarily to work under controlled conditions.
This is how professional credentials become suspect. Some of the stories Haraldsson reports are not
even amenable to verification by us. For example, he mentions how a burglar prowling in the house of
a Satya Sai Baba devotee was scared away by Satya Sai's bilocation. He does not mention the name
of the devotee, nor the name of the police station which later caught the burglar.
In the April, 1995 issue of the JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH,
Haraldsson and Richard Wiseman write an article Reactions To and An Assessment of a Videotape on
Satya Sai Baba, where they make pathetic attempts to show that from the DECCAN CHRONICLE-
Doordarshan tape no evidence of fraud by Satya Sai Baba can be deduced. Haraldsson and co-author
are invited to watch our copy of the tape, or watch one of the episodes of the British program, The
Guru Busters, a television program on Rationalist work in India, which has quite clear visuals. They
should also read the analysis of a Satya Sai Baba video tape by Dale Bayerstein, Leon Mandrake's et
al (a team of professional magicians) where among others they detect Satya Sai Baba "thumb
palming" a necklace, before "materialisation" (published in Bayerstein's book). Perhaps, Haraldsson is
also unaware of Premanand's video cassette of Satya Sai Baba producing a gold necklace at a
wedding in Balakrishna Eradi's family (a former judge from Kerala).
While waiting to watch this, the authors should find time to read the account of the Dutch author Piel
Vroon who wrote an expanded version of his article Sinterklass in India (Santa Claus in India),
published in De Volkskrant of 5 December, 1992. Piet Vroon was at Puttaparthi to film Baba at "work",
and he and his partner detected Baba remove rings, necklaces and watches from behind flower vases
and from pillows of his chair. They also detected Sai Baba holding vibhuti balls in one hand,
transferring them to the other hand, pulverising them and distributing them. Vibhuti is also hidden in
the mouth and removed while wiping the face, which Baba does very often. Piel Vroon's conclusion is
unambiguous: "we just think that he's a trickster and a cheat."
It is easy to see these things, especially when one's work, and perhaps livelihood, does not depend on
funding from parapsychology foundations!
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
MY SAI HISTORY
By Jed Geyerhahn
<[email protected]>
My Sai history is what would really be compelling about my word against Sai Baba. I have received 3
rings, many interviews and lots of personal attention. I was a very close friend of Hal Honig, an
aquaintence to Sam Sandweiss and others. These names may not be familiar to you, but they are
prominant names in Sai circles. My aunt is Elizabeth Elwell, a well known Bhajan teacher, who lived in
the Puttaparti Ash Ram for 9 years, and is still active in the organization in New Hampshire. I have
rings, a pictures of me with baba, and could get more witness accounts of sleight of hand. As I said, I
just need to get this stuff together, and I am very excited for this oppurtunity...
My first witness account of sleight of hand was in Brindaven. I saw Baba come out of the personal
interview room and sit down. As he was sitting there, I noticed a large gold watch under his small
hand, which he was unsuccesfully trying to hide. A moment later he made the familiar circular motion
with his hand as if he were materialising the object, and then gave a student the watch. On another
occasion, I saw Sai Baba reach between the cushions of hischair for something, and then moments
later he made the circular motion and showed everyone a small container filled with vibhuti, the gray
ash. I then noticed that behind the cushion in his chair there was something shiny, and he paid careful
attention to correct the position of the cushion to hide the object. Another time I saw him take a worn
bracelet from a man, then with his hand cupped blew on it three times at the same time moving his
hand up and down. On the final movement, he tossed the chain into the side of his chair so it slid
down between the inside of the chairs large arm and his leg. He then discreetly took took something
from his other hand and made the circular motion and gave the man a new bracelet. What is really
funny about that situation is that Sai Baba forgot to take the old bracelet from his chair when he left, so
when he got up, there it lay in plain view for everyone in the room. A student I was with, and who was
very devoted to Baba, picked it up and looked at it, confirming that it was the old bracelet. When Baba
returned and noticed his mistake, he scolded this student, who was sitting right at the foot of Baba's
chair and could not miss the bracelet. Then Baba sat and in a flash picked up the bracelet and very
discreetly tossed it into the outside upper corner of the arm of the chair. There were no visible pockets
there, but there is a very large seem, and the arms of the chair are huge enough to store lots of things.
It is also well known that prominant figures in the Indian government make fairly frequent stops to visit
with Sai Baba, including the president of India. (I was in India when the president came to visit Sai
Baba. When this happens there is huge comotion and Indians crowd darshan to see the president, not
Sai Baba). The students also know that Sai is a hoax, that he does not materialise a thing. However,
they are getting a very inexpensive education, so they keep there mouths shut. The student I talked
with most, would not tell me other things that he knew, but I am sure that it had to do with the students
who spent the night with Baba. I know this because this is where he would no longer answer my
questions. Everyone knows that Sai Baba has students spend the night with him. They stay up to
"serve" him at night. It's a very well kept secret as to how they serve Sai Baba, but little will come out
because no student wants to be kicked out of Sai Baba's school. As stated, they are receiving a very
good educations there, very inexpensively. I say very inexpensively because many believe it to be
free, but this is not the case. Students pay for room and board, which to many is rather expensive. The
education part is free, but there are bills.
This brings me to my very questionable experiences with Sai Baba. On my second trip to Sai Baba I
had four interviews. Each time I saw Baba, his hand would gradually make more prominant
connections to my groin. The first interview was a slight swipe, the second a definite touch and the
third time he grabbed me and with a very stern face looked me directly in the eye and said "you are
very weak!" Needless to say, he scared and embarassed me. I was guilt ridden to have sexual
passion, though I was a healthy 16 year old boy, a testosterone machine. I was not going to talk to
anyone about the experience. In the final interview he asked me to take my pants down. I was totally
confused, so he took them down for me. He then made vibhutti and rubbed it on my genitals. On my
third trip, he did the same thing, but rubbed oil on my genitals. Fortunately, I was never taken
advantage of any worse, but I was humiliated when I realised his true intentions, and I felt I had really
lost an innocence that I would have cherished keeping.
When I finally did talk about what happened to me, the first two reactions were to never speak of it with
others because the whole thing would be taken out of context and misconstrued. Then I talked to
others my own age and they told me of similiar experiences. I even heard terrible stories of children
who would meet with Sai Baba twice a week to play "sex games" and the like. Oral sex and
masturbation were common in these meetings. Many of my own friends told me about attempts by Sai
Baba to touch them, but they wouldn't let him. I need to really put this together better, but this is a
sketch of what I have. Any comments would be helpful, and you can do what you like with any of this
material. You can also post my email address for anyone who like to contact me
([email protected]). I would be very greatful to talk with any X-devotees who have had similiar
experieces with Sai Baba. It might encourage me to get this all together quicker, and they might help
me put something larger together.
Sincerely,
Jed
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
We also believe that our planet is passing through a time of profound change and are seeking to
create a global community of like-minded people that can safely pass through whatever changes may
come our way and help give birth to a new way of life on our planet.
------------
NewHeavenNewEarth (NHNE)
a 501(c)3 non-profit organization
P.O. Box 2242
Sedona, AZ USA 86339
eMail: [email protected]
NHNE Website: http://www.nhne.com/
Phone: (928) 282-6120
Fax: (815) 346-1492
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------
Special Article
Sai Baba: Divine Pedophile
Wednesday, July 25, 2001
"News,
Inspiration,
& Consumer Protection
for Spiritual Seekers"
------------
------------
To say "Thanks":
http://www.nhne.com/main/donations.html
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
EDITOR'S COMMENT:
Maybe someday, eons from now, there will be no need to be, or follow, gurus like Sai
Baba. Until then, it seems wise to learn what we can from these larger-than-life
dramas. Studying the likes of Sai Baba may not save us from believing magic tricks
are miracles, or inner visions of dubious holy people are sure-fire visitations from the
Divine, but it can't hurt. And who knows: maybe we'll learn more about ourselves, and
the turbulent, often schizophrenic forces that populate our inner worlds...
------------
UNTOUCHABLE?
Millions of people worship Sai Baba as God incarnate. More and more say the Indian
guru is also a pedophile.
By Michelle Goldberg
Salon
July 25, 2001
http://www.salon.com/people/feature/2001/07/25/baba/print.html
PUTTAPARTHI, India -- One of the most powerful holy men in India presides over the
world's biggest ashram, Prasanthi Nilayam, or Abode of Peace, in a remote town
located in a barren corner of Andhra Pradesh, a desperately poor state in a
desperately poor country. The town boasts a shiny planetarium, two hospitals that
treat patients for free, a college, a music school and immaculate, colorful playgrounds.
Luxury apartment buildings are springing up on land that just a few decades ago was
covered with ramshackle mud huts. And there's a brand-new airport to serve the
wealthier devotees of Sathya Sai Baba, a 75-year-old south Indian man with a big
bushy Afro and a warm smile.
Somewhere between 10 million and 50 million people worship Sai Baba as God
incarnate, and they stream into Puttaparthi from six continents, sleeping in one of the
ashram's 10,000 beds or at one of the town's many guesthouses. Meanwhile, the
growing number of ex-devotees who decry their former master as a sexual harasser,
a fraud and even a pedophile has hardly put a dent in his following, though their
voices are getting louder.
"Sai Baba was my God -- who dares to refuse God? He was free to do whatever he
wanted to do with me; he had my trust, my faith, my love and my friendship; he had
me in totality," says Iranian-American former follower Said Khorramshahgol. What Sai
Baba chose to do with him, Khorramshahgol says, was to repeatedly call him into
private interviews and order him to drop his pants and massage his penis. Other
former devotees contend Sai Baba did even more. No matter -- in this part of the
world, faith is absolute. Believers don't refuse God, and they don't question him.
On Puttaparthi's outskirts, a Hindu temple has a statue of Sai Baba among its
pantheon of deities, standing right next to Krishna. In the town, every conceivable
surface is adorned with pictures of Sai Baba wearing an orange robe and a benign
smile. There's a photo of him garlanded with fake pink flowers in my hotel room and a
giant portrait behind the reception desk. Each afternoon, a speaker across from my
bed pipes in music praising the guru. When I buy a pen to take notes, it has Sai
Baba's smiling face on it.
Days at the ashram revolve around an event known as "darshan," when Sai Baba
walks through an open-air, pastel-colored hall (called a mandir) and shows his
precious self to the assembled multitudes. It takes place once in the morning and
once in the afternoon, and people line up for hours beforehand. Everyone is
desperate to get in first, because sitting near the front means that Sai Baba might say
a few words to you, accept a letter or even invite you into his special chamber for a
private interview. Private interviews are the raison d'être of life in Puttaparthi. They're
where Sai Baba does most of his famous materializations -- ostensibly conjuring up
objects like rings, watches and necklaces from the air as gifts for the faithful.
The afternoon I went to darshan, I spent 45 minutes waiting in a line outside and 45
more minutes sitting cross-legged amid thousands of other worshipers on the marble
floor of the mandir. There were almost as many foreigners in the hall, which can seat
about 15,000 people, as there were Indians. Dozens of chandeliers hung from the
ceiling, which was decorated with gold leaf. At the foot of the mandir was a stage, with
a door leading into the guru's private interview room.
Just when the boredom was growing interminable, recorded music started up and a
charge went through the crowd as necks craned for a glimpse of Sai Baba, a slightly
frail figure wearing his customary floor-length robe and fluffy nimbus of black hair. He
gave a little Princess Di wave as he walked from the women's side to the men's side
(everything at the ashram is strictly segregated by sex) and then back again, taking
some of the letters that were fervently offered to him as he passed. All around me
women's eyes were shining, and some of the women rocked back and forth
ecstatically. Sai Baba then exited the way he'd entered, and it was over -- in less than
10 minutes. An angelic-looking retired woman from Denmark told me she'd been
doing this every day, twice a day, for three months.
Darshan is just about the only event that occurs at the ashram. There are no
indoctrination or even meditation sessions. Aside from strict vegetarianism, Sai Baba
prescribes no particular practices. His teachings are flowery and vague, combining
colorful Hindu mythology, a Buddhist focus on transcending worldly desire, the
Christian idea of service and an evangelical emphasis on direct experience of the
divine. According to "Ocean of Love," a book published last year by the Sri Sathya Sai
Central Trust, "there is no new path that He is preaching, no new order that He has
created. There is no new religion that He has come to add or a particular philosophy
that He recommends ... His mission is unique and simple. His mission is that of love
and compassion."
This pleasant vagueness allows believers to project anything they like onto Sai Baba.
People see his hand everywhere, and in Puttaparthi's spiritual hothouse nearly every
occurrence is viewed as fresh proof of his power. Apart from letters and the coveted
interviews, the accepted way to communicate with Sai Baba is via dreams and
visions, and thus the town teems with people interpreting their subconscious hiccups
as gospel. An American named George Leland said that Sai has come to him in the
guise of a Tijuana, Mexico, traffic cop and a Japanese airline passenger. A 32-year-
old Argentine woman told me she gave up her Buenos Aires apartment and her
medical studies after Baba summoned her while she slept.
To some, Sai Baba radiates love and whimsy, while to others he's stern and tricky,
destroying their relationships or afflicting their bodies in the service of their spiritual
advancement. Leland, a big, stately 61-year-old who looks like Hollywood's version of
a powerful senator, told me, "Swami's job isn't to make you happy, it's to liberate you."
In his case, that meant giving up his career as a motivational speaker and then his
marriage. "Sai Baba is the most powerful being that ever came to the planet," he said
over breakfast at a popular Tibetan restaurant in town. Leland, who has lived in
Puttaparthi for four years, feels he must follow him, but that doesn't mean he enjoys it.
He said sadly, "Even at this moment, my mind doesn't want to believe that God
doesn't want me to be happy, to have a relationship, to be prosperous, to enjoy life."
"Sometimes I think the ashram is a madhouse and Swami is the director," said Rico
Mario Haus, a recent 24-year-old convert. I'd met Haus, a Swiss man whose square
black glasses lent a bit of quirkiness to his wholesome good looks, two months before
in the seaside state of Kerala. We'd both been extras in an Indian musical, and we'd
both learned of Puttaparthi from a Sai Baba follower on the set. Ironically (or, as it now
seemed to Haus, portentously), we'd played Western devotees of a towering guru who
saved the soul of the errant hero. At the time, Haus was a cocky kid planning to ride
his motorcycle to Kashmir. Now, wearing white pajamas, he said, "Baba was calling
me. When you believe in God, there are no coincidences." Nevertheless, he'd kept his
sense of humor and found a certain subversive delight in telling us about the lunatics
he lived with. "When you don't have problems, you don't go to the ashram," he said.
Most of the time, Puttaparthi's ambient spiritual hysteria is fairly faint. With its good
restaurants and relatively clean streets, the town can be quite pleasant. But there are
occasional bursts of madness. One afternoon, a young Malaysian woman had a
psychotic breakdown, attacked ashram workers and was dragged away by police. I
later found her at the police station, half-catatonic, mumbling "darshan, darshan,
darshan" over and over again. At dinner another evening, Haus pointed out a wan
Austrian woman tugging around a listless little boy. She was frenzied because she'd
had a dream in which Sai Baba instructed her to abandon her 7-year-old son and live
on the streets as a beggar, and she didn't know whether she had the "strength" to do
it.
Of course, outsiders expect insanity in fringe religions. But Sai Baba isn't just any cult
leader. Because he isn't well known in America, it's hard to convey the awesome
power he has in India. In addition to the droves of foreigners who flock to see him, Sai
Baba's acolytes include the cream of India's elite. Prime Minister A.B. Vajpayee is a
devotee, as is former Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao. A 1993 article in the Times
of India counts among the guru's followers "governors, chief ministers, assorted
politicians, business tycoons, newspaper magnates, jurists, sportsmen, academics
and, yes, even scientists."
Even if you don't believe in the miracles he's credited with -- resurrections, faith
healings, materializations -- his phenomenal popularity in India is easy to understand.
Just outside Puttaparthi is an enormous hospital he helped build that provides free
cardiology, optometry and nephrology care to all comers. It was funded in part by a
$20 million donation from Isaac Tigrett, co-founder of the Hard Rock Cafe. The pink
facade looks like a cross between a Mogul palace and a wedding cake. One enters
into a domed hall with marble floors resplendent with images of Sai Baba and other
deities -- Jesus on the cross, the Buddha, the elephant-headed god Ganesh. Yet for
all the architecture's Las Vegas excess, especially in a country where many can't
afford even rudimentary medical care, the hospital claims impressive figures: 10,594
free cardiac surgeries, 9,090 kidney operations, 382,328 outpatient consultations.
A host of other charity projects has also won Sai Baba favor with the masses. One of
his projects installed 2,500-liter cisterns in several villages in Andhra Pradesh. Indian
children who might otherwise never have access to higher education covet spots in
his free colleges. Though rumors of chicanery and worse swirl around all these
ventures, even Sai Baba's critics admit that he has eased some of the region's
suffering. "God or a fraud, no one doubts the good work done by the Sai
organization," wrote the Illustrated Weekly of India.
All this helps explain why there has never been any official action against Sai Baba in
India, despite the dozens of ex-believers who insist that his claims to divinity mask a
wholly human craving for the bodies of the ashram's young men and boys. The
evidence is strong that Sai Baba uses his power to get in his followers' pants. It's also
strong that life is slightly less brutal for lots of poor Indians because he exists. Some
call him a saint and some call him a lecher. Possibly he's something of both.
The stories about Sai Baba's sexual misconduct are all remarkably similar. "During my
'private audiences' with Sai Baba, Sai Baba used to touch my private parts and
regularly massage my private parts, indicating that this was for spiritual purposes,"
wrote Dutchman Hans de Kraker in a letter sent to French journalist Virginie Saurel. In
December 1996, when de Kraker was 24, Sai Baba allegedly asked him to perform
oral sex: "He grabbed my head and pushed it into his groin area. He made moaning
sounds," de Kraker wrote. "As soon as he took the pressure off my head and I lifted
my head, Sai Baba lifted his dress and presented me a semi-erect member, telling me
that this was my good luck chance, and jousted his hips towards my face." When de
Kraker reported to others what had happened, he was thrown out of the ashram.
American Jed Geyerhahn, who was 16 when Sai Baba started coming on to him,
echoes de Kraker's account: "Each time I saw Baba, his hand would gradually make
more prominent connections to my groin." The stories are endless, and endlessly
alike, concerning mostly boys and men from their midteens to their mid-20s.
They're not new, either. In 1970, Tal Brooke published a book called "Lord of the Air,"
later renamed "Avatar of Night,"
(http://www.endrunpublishing.com/AvatarOfNight.html) a vivid, detailed account of his
mind-blowing days as a questing young acolyte and his total disillusionment on
learning of his guru's sexual rapacity. Yet it's only recently, thanks in large part to the
Internet, that various victims, their parents and defecting officials from within the Sai
Organization (http://www.sathyasai.org/organize/content.htm) have banded together
to direct the energy they once poured into worshiping their master toward bringing the
man down.
Most of "The Findings" consists of testimony of sexual harassment and sexual abuse.
"Whilst still at the ashram, the worst thing for me -- as a mother of sons -- occurred
when a young man, a college student, came to our room, to plead with David, 'Please
Sir, do something to stop him sexually abusing us,'" Faye writes. "These sons of
devotees, unable to bear their untenable position of being unwilling participants in a
pedophile situation any longer, yet unable to share this with their parents because
they would be disbelieved, placed their trust in David; a trust which had built over his
five years as a visiting professor of music to the Sai college." These pleas eroded the
Baileys' faith and finally made them go public.
Since then, the movement against Sai Baba has been snowballing. In the past few
months, ex-devotees have contacted the FBI, Interpol, the Indian Supreme Court and
a host of other agencies, hoping for help in their battle against the guru. A California
man named Glen Meloy, who spent 26 years as a Sai devotee, is trying to organize a
class-action lawsuit against Sai Organization leaders in America, modeled on the one
recently launched against the Hare Krishnas
(http://www.salon.com/people/feature/2001/07/02/krishna/index.html).
His faith was shattered when he was shown excerpts from the diary of his close
friend's 15-year-old son, detailing several incidents of molestation. The child of
devotees, the boy had been raised to worship Sai Baba as God, and obliged when the
master reportedly ordered his disciple to suck his penis. "You've got all these kids who
are scared to death to do anything that will do disrespect to their parents, in a room
with someone they believe to be the creator of the whole universe," said Meloy, his
voice choked with fury. "This isn't just any child abuse; this is God himself claiming to
do this."
Hari Sampath, an Indian software professional now living in Chicago and a former
volunteer in the ashram's security service, is petitioning India's Supreme Court to
order the central government to investigate Sai Baba. His greatest concern is for Sai
Baba's Indian victims, who generally have a much more difficult time speaking out
than Westerners do. During his time at Prasanthi Nilayam, he said, many students at
the ashram's college told him they were pressured to have sex with the guru. "I've
spoken to 20 or 30 boys who have been abused, and that's just the tip of the iceberg.
There are 14-year-old kids made to live in his room and made to think it's a blessing.
In most cases, their parents have been followers for 20 years and are not going to
believe them," Sampath said by phone from Chicago. "Westerners have little to lose
by coming forward. The Indians have to go on living among Sai Baba devotees."
Sampath also wants the American government to intervene, on the grounds that
"American citizens have been knowing about this abuse and taking American boys to
Puttaparthi and feeding them to him."
So far, the anti-Sai Baba forces have scored a few victories. Many senior devotees
have defected. Last September, UNESCO yanked its cosponsorship of an education
conference in Puttaparthi, explaining that it was "deeply concerned about widely
reported allegations of sexual abuse involving youths and children that have been
leveled at the leader of the movement in question, Sathya Sai Baba."
Late last year, after Conny Larsson, a Swedish film star who once traveled the world
speaking of Sai Baba's miracles, went public about his coerced sexual relations with
the guru, the Sai Organization in Sweden was shut down, along with a Sai-affiliated
school. A cover story in the weekly magazine India Today reports that following a
story in England's Daily Telegraph, "Labour MP Tony Colman raised the issue in
Parliament. A former home office minister, Tom Sackville, also took up the matter,
saying, 'The authorities have done little so far and that is regrettable.' There is a
movement now to urge the British Government to issue warnings to people wanting to
visit Baba's ashram."
Given all this, one might suspect that Sai Baba's following would be in decline. Yet
when one looks around Puttaparthi, there seem to be enough bright-eyed converts to
replace every defector, enough denial to obscure even the most well documented
allegations and, perhaps most of all, enough fierce belief to trump ordinary moral
judgments.
July 5 was a festival day at the ashram, a day when Sai Baba addresses his
devotees. The faithful started queuing before 4 a.m. to get into the mandir. Arriving at
Prasanthi Nilayam at around 5:15 a.m., I had to walk for 20 minutes to get near the
end of the ladies line. Women were running and jostling from every direction to join
the queue, and I'd have been pushed back about 150 feet if a pretty Indian girl in
white hadn't yanked me in front of her. In the end, after waiting for more than an hour,
I didn't get in, and ended up sitting outside the mandir in a crowd of hundreds who
kept shoving to be closer to the gate, nearer to their lord's sacred energy.
Many of these people believe the official line that the charges are all lies. They're
"completely false," said the director of the Sai Organization, a tiny, ancient man who,
like every other Indian official I spoke with in the organization, asked me not to use his
name because "nobody here works on an individual basis. There is no spokesman
besides Sai Baba." He speculated that the accusers are driven by "jealousy or
frustration. Maybe they are very ill and not being cured, or they have desires that are
not being fulfilled."
Sai Baba, who hardly ever grants media interviews, alluded to the allegations himself
at an address last year, saying, "Some devotees seem to be disturbed over these
false statements. They are not true devotees at all. Having known the mighty power of
Sai, why should you be afraid of the 'cawing of crows'? All that is written on walls [or]
said in political meetings, or the vulgar tales carried by the print media, should not
carry one away."
But the guru's alleged interest in his followers' phalli is pretty much an open secret
among old hands at the ashram. The eerie thing about this story isn't just the evidence
of widespread sexual abuse in one of the world's biggest cults -- after all, between the
Roman Catholic Church and the Hare Krishnas, one is seldom surprised to find
perversity in the shadow of piety these days. What's also strange is that many of Sai's
followers seem to accept that their chastity-preaching guru takes young men,
including minors, into a private chamber, asks them to drop their pants, masturbates
them and occasionally demands blow jobs. They believe the stories, and they believe
that he's God.
In an online essay called "Sai Baba and Sex: A Clear View," (http://www.saibaba-and-
sex-aclearview.com/) an American devotee named Ram Das Awle says, "First of all, I
believe that Sathya Sai Baba is an Avatar, a full incarnation of God ... AND, from what
I've read and heard, I'm inclined to think some of the allegations about Baba are
probably true: It appears likely to me that He has occasionally had sexually intimate
interactions with devotees." After several rambling paragraphs, the essay concludes
that Sai Baba touches men to awaken their "kundalini" energy or to remove previous
bad sexual karma, and that "any sexual contact Baba has had with devotees -- of
whatever kind -- has actually been only a potent blessing, given to awaken the
spiritual power within those souls. Who can call that 'wrong'? Surely to call such
contact 'molestation' is perversity itself."
According to Leland (the American ex-motivational speaker), "when he does it, he has
a purpose." Leland says he knows a boy of 15 or 16 who was asked to touch Baba's
"genital area" during an interview. "Then Baba beckoned him to touch his feet. When
the boy looked up, Baba had his robe lifted and a big boner -- a Shiva lingam. Not
much else happened." Leland suspects such incidents are part of Sai Baba's plan to
spread his word. "Probably more people are going to know about you if there are
allegations that you're a pedophile than if you say God is incarnated on earth."
Sai Baba has also been called a second-rate magician. Even some of his believers
say they've seen him faking materializations, though to them it's part of his playfulness
and ineffability. Yet there's nothing amateurish about his genius for suspending
disbelief. Haus, the Swiss follower, seemed to have an open mind and didn't mind
discussing the charges against Sai Baba, but he didn't believe them. "I think this is a
projection of his devotees' problems," he said. "You hear a lot of rumors here, but for
me it's not important. When you're happy, why doubt it?"
He's probably lined up outside the mandir gates right now, one of thousands of men
hoping for a talk with God.
------------
Sai Baba:
http://www.nhne.com/specialreports/srsaibaba.html
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
We also believe that our planet is passing through a time of profound change and are
seeking to create a global community of like-minded people that can safely pass
through whatever changes may come our way and help give birth to a new way of life
on our planet.
------------
eMail: [email protected]
NHNE Website: http://www.nhne.com/
Phone: (928) 282-6120
Fax: (815) 346-1492
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------
CHILD ABUSE in
google
http://www.frouman.net/node/62
NATIONAL DESK | January 15, 2005, Saturday Murder and Suicide Reviving Claims
of Child Abuse in Cult By LAURIE GOODSTEIN (NYT) 1717 words Late Edition -
Final , Section A , Page 12 , Column 1 Correction Appended DISPLAYING FIRST 50
OF 1717 WORDS - Growing up in the 1970's in a religious cult known around the
world as the Children of God, Ricky Rodriguez was revered as ''the prince.'' The
group's leaders were his mother and stepfather, and they taught that their son would
guide them all when the End Times came. ... He... Correction: January 21, 2005,
Friday A picture caption on Saturday with an article about Ricky Rodriguez, a man
reared in a religious cult who the police say killed himself and his former nanny,
Angela Smith, misstated the way Ms. Smith died. She was stabbed, not shot.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?
res=F10F14FF3E5C0C768DDDA80894DD404482
-------------------------------
--------------------
http://www.skepticfiles.org/false/malpract.htm
To: MIT.EDU!witchhunt Date:
Sun, 23 Oct 94 17:13 EDT
Copyright 1994 Newspaper
Publishing P
By Rosie Waterhouse
Kelly, now 23, has disappeared. She apparently still believes she
was a member and victim of the cult and is in hiding. While Kari,
now 21, has rejected the notion that she and her family were
caught
up in a satanic conspiracy, her marriage in 1991 collapsed under
the strain of her mental anguish and a divorce action is pending.
She is still estranged from her parents. Dirk, now 15, was for two
years unable to face the father whom he once believed had
molested
him. But now they are reunited. However, doctors fear that he,
too,
will probably continue to suffer extreme mental anguish for the
rest of his life.
Now, the family has alleged in a $ 35m civil lawsuit filed this
year that therapists created false memories as part of a scheme to
collect millions of dollars in fees for the treatment of non-existent
abuse at the hands of a satanic cult.
The case, which will go to trial next year, is set to rock the US
psychotherapy and psychiatric community. The defendants include
some of America's leading exponents of recovered memory
techniques.
They include Judith Peterson, a psychologist from Houston, who
first treated the family; Roberta Sachs, a psychologist from
Illinois; and Bennett Braun, an Illinois doctor who specialises in
multiple personality disorder. The family members are also suing
the hospitals where they were treated. In total, there are 25
defendants. Not all face every allegation, but all are defending
the action.
The story can be told only through documents filed in the District
Court of Harris County, Texas, since the judge has banned all
participants and lawyers from speaking to the media.
In March 1989, aged 18, Kelly was admitted to Houston North West
medical centre after attending a "family conference" at which Ms
Peterson concluded that she, too, was involved in the cult and
joined in satanic orgies involving the abuse of her younger
brother.
Little is known about what she endured, as she is still missing.
In August 1989, Kari, then 16, went into the same hospital where
she, too, had been called for a family conference. She had been a
normal teenager attending a Houston high school where she was
an
excellent student and a flautist in the school band. After attending
the family conference, she claims, she was locked into the
psychiatric
ward, rarely leaving the room for 21 months. She was diagnosed
as
suffering from multiple personality disorder and, she says, was
told by Ms Peterson that she had killed babies in cult rituals and
that she was in danger of being kidnapped by the cult if she left
the hospital.
• Lying, cheating, and deceiving for Jesus (or for Krishna, or for Jim Jones, or for the newcomers' own good).
• Prostitution to promote "Christianity" -- Happy Hookers for Jesus.
• Committing violent acts against enemies in the name of Peace and Love.
• Beating children for Jesus or for Krishna.
• Instructions to practice "Rigorous honesty" accompanied by instructions to "Fake It Until You Make It" and "Act
• Bombing abortion clinics and killing doctors who perform abortions in order to "protect human life".
• Teachings like, "You must learn to revere and love all life, and hold it sacred,", accompanied by teachings like "O
people who practice our religion are going to Heaven."
• And: It's All A Bait-And-Switch Con Game.
The actual value system of a cult is often the antithesis of the system that it advertises to the public.
Charles "Chuck" Dederich, the leader of the "new drug and alcohol rehabilitation program" called Synanon:
"Don't mess with us -- you can get killed dead, physically dead."
"Yes, I do want an ear in a glass of alcohol, I really do."
"Nonviolence was just a position we took. We change positions all of the time."
(Photo by Charlie Downs)
Rick Ross gave us an amusing example of inconsistency in Scientology when he posted the story of L
Presley (the daughter of Elvis) claiming that Scientology had saved her from drugs and alcohol:
One front, the Way to Happiness Foundation, has distributed to children in thousands
of the nation's public schools more than 3.5 million copies of a booklet Hubbard wrote
on morality. The church calls the scheme "the largest dissemination project in
Scientology history." Applied Scholastics is the name of still another front, which is
attempting to install a Hubbard tutorial program in public schools, primarily those
populated by minorities. The group also plans a 1,000 acre campus, where it will train
educators to teach various Hubbard methods. The disingenuously named Citizens
Commission on Human Rights is a Scientology group at war with psychiatry, its
primary competitor. The commission typically issues reports aimed at discrediting
particular psychiatrists and the field in general. The CCHR is also behind an all-out wa
against Eli Lilly, the maker of Prozac, the nation's top-selling antidepression drug.
Despite scant evidence, the group's members -- who call themselves "psychbusters" -
claim that Prozac drives people to murder or suicide. Through mass mailings,
appearances on talk shows and heavy lobbying, CCHR has hurt drug sales and helpe
spark dozens of lawsuits against Lilly.
Time Magazine special report on Scientology, The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power, Time Magazine May 6,
1991, page 50.
And, true to form, the "Church of Scientology" sued Time-Warner for publishing the magazine article
judge dismissed the case, saying, among other things, that "no reasonable jury could find that these sta
were published with malice." Meaning: Time Magazine just reported the truth, and that isn't publishin
malice".1
• As if their believing that the world is flat could really make it so.
• As if their imagining that God is a certain way will force God to be that way.
• As if their believing in faith healing will really make it work.
(The converse is, of course, that if you don't believe in their faith healing, you will make it fail
are an evil, harmful, person for not believing and not 'keeping the faith'.)
Some people want to know the truth, and some people just want to go on a big ego trip and believe in
tales. Cult members choose to believe in fairy tales and fantasies --
• They like to imagine that they have magical powers -- that their chants, incantations, beliefs, an
prayers will really have some physical effect on the world.
• They like to imagine that they are so powerful that their merely believing something will chang
world.
• They also like to imagine that their beliefs are very important --
o That it will ruin God's whole day if they don't believe what God wants them to believes
they are sure that they know what God wants them to believe.)
o Or that the world won't get saved if they don't keep the faith.
That's just a bit grandiose and egotistical. --Which, in turn, reveals why they like to imagine th
beliefs control reality. Their magical fantasy world is just a big fat vain ego trip where they can
important and powerful.
• If she sank and drowned, that meant that she was innocent.
• If she floated and lived, it was because the Devil was holding her up, and she must now be exe
burning at the stake or hanging.
Likewise, if she confessed under torture to being a witch, then that proved that she was one.
If she didn't confess, then that proved that she was a deceitful lying witch who wouldn't tell the truth.
Damned if you do, and damned if you don't.
Willa Appel recorded the following story of a double bind:
A form of the double bind frequently exists in the relationship cult members have with
their leader. Robert Perez, for example, in discussing a typical experience in his cult,
unwittingly described the classic double bind. Patterson Brown, the leader of Christ
Brotherhood, had mowed the lawn one day. He had been unable, however, to cut a
narrow strip of grass that sloped precipitiously and was riddled with pot holes. To help
out, Robert took a scythe and cut down the tall grass. At that point the Guru became
furious, screaming, "You know you should leave it alone! You know that if I didn't cut
that, I didn't cut that for a reason. If you only knew what it was like to be a child, you'd
know that it's fun to play in the weeds." Needless to say, Robert was taken aback.
Criticized for helping, he knew that he would also have been criticized for not helping.
"It was the kind of thing that in another frame of mind with him, a week down the line,
he'd say, 'How come nobody's done that? Do I have to do everything around here?'"
Cults in America; Programmed for Paradise, Willa Appel, page 103.
Such double binds induce a feeling of powerlessness in their victims, which helps a cult to maintain co
over its members. Willa Appel continued:
Christ Brotherhood members never knew what to expect. Each morning they half
anticipated to be told to get out and never come back. The unpredictability of their
leader, as Robert expressed it, "made you completely paranoid about what you were
doing and what you weren't doing. You'd do one thing and then he'd just flip-flop the
other way. You never knew if he was going to turn around and yell at you or praise
you." Unfortunately, the erratic nature of Christ Brotherhood's leader could not be
easily dismissed by his followers because they depended upon him and his opinions t
validate their own lives. "What Patterson said was how you felt about yourself."
Cults in America; Programmed for Paradise, Willa Appel, page 103.
58. Everybody else needs the guru to boss him around, but nobo
bosses the guru around.
This needs no explanation.
59. The guru criticizes everybody else, but nobody criticizes the
Criticizing the leader would conflict with Cult Rule Number One -- The Guru Is Always Right.
Footnotes:
1) Judge Leisure's Opinion and Order (issued July 16, 1996), United States District Court Southern Di
New York, 92 Civ. 3024 (PKL), CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Plaintiff, vs. T
WARNER, INC., TIME INC., MAGAZINE COMPANY, and RICHARD BEHAR, Defendants.
---------------------------
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Fishman/time-behar.html
Back to: Church of Scientology International v. Fishman and Geertz
Scientology: The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power.
This famous article critical of Scientology has been the target of an organized book-burning
campaign by Scientologists as detailed in the Scarff deposition. The piece was awarded the
Gerald Loeb Award for distinguished business and financial journalism, the Worth Bingham
Prize and the Conscience in Media Awards from the American Society of Journalists and
Authors.
by Richard Behar
By all appearan
Noah Lottick o
Kingston, Pa., h
a normal, happy
year-old who w
looking for his
the sun. On the
June when his p
drove to New Y
to obtain his bo
were nearly cat
with grief.
Scientology
run by David
Miscavige, 31, a high school dropout and second-generation church member. Def
describe him as cunning, ruthless and so paranoid about perceived enemies that
kept plastic wrap over his glass of water. His obsession is to obtain credibility for
Scientology in the 1990s. Among other tactics, the group:
• Retains public relation powerhouse Hill and Knowlton to help shed the church's fringe-group i
• Joined such household names as Sony and Pepsi as a main sponsor of Ted Turner's Goodwill G
• Buys massive quantities of its own books from retail stores to propel the titles onto best-seller
• Runs full-page ads in such publications as Newsweek and Business Week that call Scientology
"philosophy," along with a plethora of TV ads touting the group's books.
• Recruits wealthy and respectable professionals through a web of consulting groups that typical
their ties to Scientology.
The founder of this enterprise was part storyteller, part flimflam man. Born In Neb
in 1911, Hubbard served in the Navy during World War II and soon afterward
complained to the Veterans Administration about his "suicidal inclinations" and hi
"seriously affected" mind. Nevertheless, Hubbard was a moderately successful wr
pulp science fiction. Years later, church brochures described him falsely as an
"extensively decorated" World War II hero who was crippled and blinded in action
pronounced dead and miraculously cured through Scientology. Hubbard's "doctor
from "Sequoia University" was a fake mall-order degree. In a I984 case in which t
church sued a Hubbard biographical researcher, a California judge concluded tha
founder was "a pathological liar."
Hubbard wrote one of Scientology's sacred texts, Dianetics: The Modern Science
Mental Health, in 1950. In it he introduced a crude psychotherapeutic technique h
called "auditing." He also created a simplified lie detector (called an "E-meter") th
designed to measure electrical changes In the skin while subjects discussed intim
details of their past. Hubbard argued that unhappiness sprang from mental aberr
(or "engrams") caused by early traumas. Counseling sessions with the E-meter, h
claimed, could knock out the engrams, cure blindness and even improve a person
intelligence and appearance.
Hubbard kept adding steps, each more costly, for his followers to climb. In the 19
the guru decreed that humans are made of clusters of spirits (or "thetans") who w
banished to earth some 75 million years ago by a cruel galactic ruler named Xenu
Naturally, those thetans had to be audited.
An Internal Revenue Service ruling in 1967 stripped Scientology's mother church
tax-exempt status. A federal court ruled in 1971 that Hubbard's medical claims w
bogus and that E-meter auditing could no longer be called a scientific treatment.
Hubbard responded by going fully religious, seeking First Amendment protection
Scien- tology's strange rites. His counselors started sporting clerical collars. Chap
were built, franchises became "missions," fees became "fixed donations," and Hu
comic-book cosmology became "sacred scriptures.'
During the early 1970s, the IRS conducted its own auditing sessions and proved t
Hubbard was skimming millions of dollars from the church, laundering the money
through dummy corporations in Panama and stashing it in Swiss bank accounts.
Moreover, church members stole
documents, filed false tax returns
harassed the agency's employees
late 1985, with high-level defector
accusing Hubbard of having stolen
much as S200 million from the ch
the IRS was seeking an indictmen
Hubbard for tax fraud. Scientology
members "worked day and night"
shredding documents the IRS sou
according to defector Aznaran, wh
part in the scheme. Hubbard, who
been in hiding for five years, died
the criminal case could be prosecu
Today the church invents costly n
services with all the zeal of its fou
Scientology doctrine warns that e
adherents who are "cleared" of en
face grave spiritual dangers unles
are pushed to higher and more
expensive levels. According to the church's latest price list, recruits -- "raw meat,
Hubbard called them -- take auditing sessions that cost as much as $1,000 an ho
$12,500 for a 12 1/2-hour "intensive."
Psychiatrists say these sessions can produce a drugged-like, mind-controlled eup
that keeps customers coming back for more. To pay their fees, newcomers can ea
commissions by recruiting new mem- bers, become auditors themselves (Miscavi
so at age 12), or join the church staff and receive free counseling in exchange for
their written contracts describe as a "billion years" of labor. "Make sure that lots o
bodies move through the shop," implored Hubbard in one of his bulletins to officia
"Make money. Make more money. Make others produce so as to make money . .
However you get them in or why, just do it."
Harriet Baker learned the hard way about Scientology's business of selling religio
When Baker, 73, lost her husband to cancer, a Scientologist turned up at her Los
Angeles home peddling a $1,300 auditing package to cure her grief. Some $15,00
later, the Scientologists discovered that her house was debt free. They arranged
$45,000 mortgage, which they pressured her to tap for more auditing until Baker
children helped their mother snap out of her daze. Last June, Baker demanded a
$27,000 refund for unused services, prompting two cult members to show up at h
door unannounced with an E-meter to interrogate her. Baker never got the mone
financially strapped, was forced to sell her house in September.
Before Noah Lottick killed himself, he had paid more than $5,000 for church coun
His behavior had also become strange. He once remarked to his parents that his
Scientology mentors could actually read minds. When his father suffered a major
attack, Noah insisted that it was purely psychosomatic. Five days before he jump
Noah burst into his parents' home and demanded to know why they were spreadi
"false rumors" about him -- a delusion that finally prompted his father to call a
psychiatrist.
It was too late. "From Noah's friends at Dianetics" read the card that accompanie
bouquet of flowers at Lottick's funeral. Yet no Scientology staff members bothere
show up. A week earlier, local church officials had given Lottick's parents a red-ca
tour of their center. A cult leader told Noah's parents that their son had been at th
church just hours before he disappeared -- but the church denied this story as soo
the body was identified. True to form, the cult even haggled with the Lotticks ove
$3,000 their son had paid for services he never used, insisting that Noah had inte
as a "donation."
The church has invented hundreds of goods and services for which members are
to give "donations." Are you having trouble "moving swiftly up the Bridge" -- that
advancing up the stepladder of en- lightenment? Then you can have your case re
for a mere $1,250 "donation." Want to know "why a thetan hangs on to the physi
universe?" Try 52 of Hubbard's tape-recorded speeches from 1952, titled "Ron's
Philadelphia Doctorate Course Lectures," for $2,525. Next: nine other series of th
sort. For the collector, gold-and-leather-bound editions of 22 of Hubbard's books (
bookends) on subjects ranging from Scientology ethics to radiation can be had fo
$1,900.
To gain influence and lure richer, more sophisticated followers, Scientology has la
resorted to a wide array of front groups and financial scams. Among them:
• CONSULTING. Sterling Management Systems, formed in 1983, has been ranked in recent yea
Inc. magazine as one of America's fastest-growing private companies (estimated 1988 revenue
mil- lion). Sterling regularly mails a free newsletter to more than 300,000 health-care professio
mostly dentists, promising to increase their incomes dramatically. The firm offers seminars and
that typically cost $10,OOO. But Sterling's true aim is to hook customers for Scientology. "The
has a rotten product, so they package it as something else," says Peter Georgiades, a Pittsburgh
who represents Sterling victims. "It's a kind of bait and switch." Sterling's founder, dentist Gre
Hughes is now under investigation by California's Board of Dental Examiners for incompetenc
lawsuits are pending against him for malpractice (seven others have been settled), mostly for
orthodontic work on children.
Many dentists who have unwittingly been drawn into the cult are filing or
threatening lawsuits as well. Dentist Robert Geary of Medina, Ohio, who ent
Sterling seminar in 1988, endured "the most extreme high-pressure sales ta
have ever faced." Sterling officials told Geary, 45, that their firm was not lin
Scientology, he says. but Geary claims they eventually convinced him that
his wife Dorothy had personal problems that required auditing. Over five m
the Gearys say, they spent $130,000 for services, plus $50,000 for "gold-
embossed, investment-grade" books signed by Hubbard. Geary contends th
Scientologists not only called his bank to increase his credit card limit but a
forged his signature on a $20,000 loan application. "It was insane," he reca
couldn't even get an accounting from them of what I was paying for." At on
point, the Gearys claim,
Scientologists held Dorothy
hostage for two weeks in a
mountain cabin, after which
was hospitalized for a nervo
breakdown.
Last October, Sterling broke
bad news to another dentist
Glover Rowe of Gadsden, Ala
his wife Dee. Tests showed t
unless they signed up for au
Glover's practice would fail,
Dee would someday abuse t
child. The next month the Ro
flew to Glendale, Calif., whe
shuttled daily from a local h
a Dianetics center. "We thou
they were brilliant people be
they seemed to know so mu
about us," recalls Dee. "The
realized our hotel room mus
been bugged." After bolting
the center, $23,000 poorer,
Rowes say, they were chase
repeatedly by Scientologists
foot and in cars. Dentists are
only once at risk. Scientolog
makes pitches to chiropracto
podiatrists and veterinarians
• PUBLIC INFLUENCE. One front, the Way to Happiness Foundation, has distributed to childr
thousands of the nation's public schools more than 3.5 million copies of a booklet Hubbard wro
morality. The church calls the scheme "the largest dissemination project in Scientology history
Applied Scholastics is the name of still another front, which is attempting to install a Hubbard
program in public schools, primarily those populated by minorities. The group also plans a 1,0
campus, where it will train educators to teach various Hubbard methods. The disingenuously n
Citizens Commission on Human Rights is a Scientology group at war with psychiatry, its prim
competitor. The commission typically issues reports aimed at discrediting particular psychiatri
the field in general. The CCHR is also behind an all-out war against Eli Lilly, the maker of Pro
nation's top-selling antidepression drug. Despite scant evidence, the group's members -- who c
themselves "psychbusters" -- claim that Prozac drives people to murder or suicide. Through ma
mailings, appearances on talk shows and heavy lobbying, CCHR has hurt drug sales and helpe
dozens of lawsuits against Lilly.
• HEALTH CARE. HealthMed, a chain of clinics run by Scientologists, promotes a grueling and
excessive system of saunas, exercise and vitamins designed by Hubbard to purify the body. Ex
denounce the regime as quackery and potentially harmful, yet HealthMed solicits unions and p
agencies for contracts. The chain is plugged heavily in a new book, Diet for a Poisoned Planet,
journalist David Steinman, who concludes that scores of common foods (among them: peanuts
bluefish, peaches and cottage cheese) are dangerous.
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop labeled the book "trash," and the
and Drug Administration issued a paper in October that claims Steinman di
his facts. "HealthMed is a gateway to Scientology, and Steinman's book is a
sorting mechanism," says physician William Jarvis, who is head of the Natio
Council Against Health Fraud. Steinman, who describes Hubbard favorably a
"researcher," denies any ties to the church and contends, "HealthMed has n
affiliation that I know of with Scientology."
• DRUG TREATMENT. Hubbard's purification treatments are the mainstay of Narconon, a Scie
run chain of 33 alcohol and drug rehabilitation centers -- some in prisons under the name "Crim
in 12 countries. Narconon, a classic vehicle for drawing addicts into the cult, now plans to ope
calls the world's largest treatment center, a 1,400-bed facility on an Indian reservation near New
Okla. (pop. 2,400. At a 1989 ceremony in Newkirk, the As- sociation for Better Living and Ed
presented Narconon a check for $200,000 and a study praising its work. The association turned
be part of Scientology itself. Today the town is battling to keep out the cult, which has fought b
through such tactics as sending private detectives to snoop on the mayor and the local newspap
publisher.
• FINANCIAL SCAMS. Three Florida Scientologists, including Ronald Bernstein, a big contrib
the church's international "war chest," pleaded guilty in March to using their rare-coin dealersh
money laundry. Other notorious activities by Scientologists include making the shady Vancouv
exchange even shadier (see box) and plotting to plant operatives in the World Bank, Internation
Monetary Fund and Export-Import Bank of the U.S. The alleged purpose of this scheme: to ga
information on which countries are going to be denied credit so that Scientology-linked traders
make illicit profits by taking "short" positions in those countries' currencies.
• BOOK PUBLISHING. Scientology mischiefmaking has even moved to the book industry. Sin
at least a dozen Hubbard books, printed by a church company, have made best-seller lists. The
from a 5,000-page sci-fi decology (Black Genesis, The Enemy Within, An Alien Affair) to the
old Dianetics. In 1988 the trade publication Publishers Weekly awarded the dead author a plaq
commemorating the appearance of Dianetics on its best-seller list for 100 consecutive weeks.
By Richard Behar
In the 1960s and '70s, L. Ron Hubbard used to periodically fill a converted ferry ship with adoring aco
sail off to spread the word. One by one, countries -- Britain, Greece, Spain, Portugal, and Venezuela --
their ports, usually because of a public outcry. At one point, a court in Australia revoked the church's s
a religion; at another, a French court convicted Hubbard of fraud in absentia.
Today Hubbard's minions continue to wreak global havoc, costing governments
considerable effort and money to try to stop them. In Italy a two-year trial of 76
Scientologists, among them the former leader of the church's Italian operations, i
nearing completion in Milan. Two weeks ago, prosecutor Pietro Forno requested ja
terms for all the defendants who are accused of extortion, cheating "mentally
incapacitated" people and evading as much as $50 million in taxes. "All of the tria
victims went to Scientology in search of a cure or a better life," said Forno, "But t
Scientologists were amateur psychiatrists who practiced psychological terrorism"
some victims, he added, "the intervention of the Scientologists was devastating."
The Milan case was triggered by parents complaining to officials that Scientology
financial stranglehold on their children, who had joined the church or entered Nar
its drug rehabilitation unit. In 1986 Treasury and paramilitary police conducted ra
20 cities across Italy shutting down 27 Scientology centers and seizing 100,000
documents. To defend itself in the trial, the cult has retained some of Italy's most
famous lawyers.
In Canada, Scientology is using a legal team that includes Clayton Ruby, one of th
country's foremost civil rights lawyers, to defend itself and nine of its members w
to stand trial in June in Toronto. The charges: stealing documents concerning
Scientology from the Ministry of the Attorney General, the Canadian Mental Healt
Association, two police forces and other institutions. The case stems from a 1983
surprise raid of the church's Toronto headquarters by more than 100 policemen, w
had arrived in three chartered buses; some 2 million pages of documents were se
over a two-day period. Ruby, whose legal maneuvers delayed the case for years,
trying to get it dismissed because of "unreasonable delay."
Spain's Justice Ministry has twice denied Scientology status as a religion, but that
not slowed the church' s expansion. In 1989 the Ministry of Health issued a report
calling the sect "totalitarian" and "pure and simple charlatanism." The year before
authorities had raided 26 church centers, with the result that 11 Scientologists st
accused of falsification of records, coercion and capital flight. "The real god of thi
organization is money," said Madrid examining magistrate Jose Maria Vasquez Ho
before referring the case to a higher court because it was too complex for his
jurisdiction. Eugene Ingram, a private investigator working for Scientology claims
helped get Honrubia removed from the case for leaking nonpublic documents to t
press.
In France it took a death to spur the government into action: 16 Scientologists we
indicted last year for fraud and "complicity in the practice of illegal medicine" foll
the suicide of an industrial designer in Lyon. In the victim's house investigators fo
medication allegeally provided to him by the church without doctor's prescription
Among those charged in the case is the president of Scientology's French operati
and the head of the Paris-based Celebrity Centre, which caters to famous membe
Outside the U.S., Scientology appears to be most active in Germany where the at
general of the state of Bavaria has branded the cult "distinctly totalitarian" and a
"the economic exploitation of customers who are in bondage to it." In 1984 nearly
police raided the church in Munich. At the time, city officials were reportedly
collaborating with U.S. tax inspectors and trying to prove that the cult was actual
profitmaking business. More recently, Hamburg state authorities moved to rescin
Scientology's tax reduced status, while members of parliament are seeking crimin
proceedings. In another domain, church linked management consulting firms hav
infiltrated small and middle sized companies throughout Germany, according to a
expose published this month in the newsmagazine DER SPIEGEL; the consultants,
typically hide their ties to Scientology, indoctrinate employees by using Hubbard'
methods. A German anticult organization estimates that Scientology has at least
fronts or splinter groups operating in the country. German politics appears as wel
attract Hubbard's zealots. In March the Free Democrats, partners in Chancellor He
Kohl' s ruling coalition in Bonn, accused Scientology of trying to infiltrate their Ha
branch. Meanwhile the main opposition party, the Social Democrats, has been wa
its members in the formerly com- munist eastern part of the country against
exploitation by the church. Even federal officials are being used by the church: on
Scientology front group sent copies of a Hubbard written pamphlet on moral valu
members of the Bundestag. The Office of Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Gensche
unwittingly endorsed the Scientologists' message: "Indeed, the world would be a
beautiful place if the principles formulated in the pamphlet, a life characterized b
reason and responsibility, would find wider attention."
[end of Internationl Edition-only section]
Strange things seem to happen to people who write about Scientology. Journalist Paulette Cooper wro
critical book on the cult in 1971. This led to a Scientology plot (called Operation Freak-Out) whose go
according to church documents, was "to get P.C. incarcerated in a mental institution or jail." It almost
by impersonating Cooper, Scientologists got her indicted in 1973 for threatening to bomb the church.
who also endured 19 lawsuits by the church, was finally exonerated in 1977 after FBI raids on the chu
offices in Los Angeles and Washington uncovered documents from the bomb scheme. No Scientologi
ever tried in the matter.
For the TIME story, at least 10 attorneys and six private detectives were unleashe
Scientology and its followers in an effort to threaten, harass and discredit me. Las
12, not long after I began this assignment, I planned to lunch with Eugene Ingram
church's leading private eye and a former cop. Ingram, who was tossed off the Lo
Angeles police force In 1981 for alleged ties to prostitutes and drug dealers, had
that he might be able to arrange a meeting with church boss David Miscavige. Jus
hours before the lunch, the church's "national trial counsel," Earle Cooley, called
inform me that I would be eating alone.
Alone, perhaps, but not forgotten. By day's end,
learned, a copy of my personal credit report -- wi
detailed information about my bank accounts, ho
mortgage, credit-card payments, home address a
Social Security number -- had been illegally retrie
from a national credit bureau called Trans Union.
sham company that received it, "Educational Fun
Services" of Los Angeles, gave as its address a m
drop a few blocks from Scientology's headquarte
owner of the mail drop is a private eye named Fr
Wolfson, who admits that an Ingram associate re
him to retrieve credit reports on several individua
Wolfson says he was told that Scientology's attor
"had judgments against these people and were t
to collect on them." He says now, "These are vici
people. These are vipers." Ingram, through a law
denies any involvement in the scam.
During the past five months, private investigator
been contacting acquaintances of mine, ranging
neighbors to a former colleague, to inquire about
subjects such as my health (like my credit rating, it's excellent) and whether I've
had trouble with the IRS (unlike Scientology, I haven't). One neighbor was greeted
dawn outside my Manhattan apartment building by two men who wanted to know
whether I lived there. I finally called Cooley to demand that Scientology stop the
nonsense. He promised to look into it.
After that, however, an attorney subpoenaed me, while another falsely suggested
might own shares in a company I was reporting about that had been taken over b
Scientologists (he also threatened to contact the Securities and Exchange Commi
A close friend in Los Angeles received a disturbing telephone call from a Scientolo
staff member seeking data about me -- an indication that the cult may have illega
obtained my personal phone records. Two detectives contacted me, posing as a f
and a relative of a so-called cult victim, to elicit negative statements from me abo
Scientology. Some of my conversations with them were taped, transcribed and
presented by the church in affidavits to TIME's lawyers as "proof" of my bias agai
Scientology.
Among the comments I made to one of the detectives, who represented himself a
"Harry Baxter," a friend of the victim's family, was that "the church trains people
Baxter and his colleagues are hardly in a position to dispute that observation. His
name is Barry Silvers, and he is a former investigator for the Justice Department's
Organized Crime Strike Force. (RB)
[Photograph, page 51]
The Lotticks lost their son
[photograph of the couple standing beside the grave of their son.]
[Photograph, page 53]
Harriet Baker, 73, lost her house
[photograph of Harriet Baker on front of her old home.]
[Chart, page 52-53]
The Bridge to enlightenment
[shows costs of various "courses" ranging from a free Personality Test to more th
$1,000 an hour for "finding and releasing" "body thetans" (BTs).]
Back to: Church of Scientology International v. Fishman and Geertz
---------------------------
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