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Prem Rawat

Prem Pal Singh Rawat (born 10 December 1957), formerly known as Maharaji, is an Indian international speaker and author. His teachings include a meditation practice he calls "Knowledge",[1] and peace education based on the discovery of personal resources such as inner strength, choice, appreciation and hope.[2]

Prem Rawat
Prem Rawat in Barcelona, Spain in 2018
Born
Prem Pal Singh Rawat

(1957-12-10) 10 December 1957 (age 65)
NationalityIndian, American
Other names(Guru) Maharaji
OccupationSpeaker
Years active1966–present
Organization(s)The Prem Rawat Foundation
Words of Peace
Elan Vital
Divine Light Mission
Known forPeace Education Program
Millennium '73
"Peace Bomb" address
SpouseMarolyn Rawat
Children4
Parents
RelativesSatpal Rawat (brother)
Rajaji Rawat (brother)
Amrita Rawat (sister-in-law)
Navi Rawat (niece)
AwardsLifetime Achievement Award of Asia Pacific Brands Foundation
Websitepremrawat.com

Prem Rawat is the youngest son of Hans Ram Singh Rawat, an Indian guru and the founder of the Divya Sandesh Parishad, later known as Divine Light Mission (DLM). After his father's death, eight-year-old Prem Rawat assumed his role. At 13, he traveled to the West and took up residence in the United States. When young adults took interest in his message, the movement grew by tens of thousands. Many in the news media were perplexed by his youth and claims of divine status; he was also criticized for a lack of intellectual content in his public discourses,[3][4] and for leading an opulent lifestyle.[5][6]

Prem Rawat's marriage at the age of 16 to a non-Indian severed his relationship with his mother. At that point, the Indian branch of DLM controlled by his mother split from DLM everywhere else; at that point it was established in 55 countries. In the early 1980s, he began to discard references to religion in his speeches and closed the ashrams. The name of the DLM was changed to Elan Vital. Since that time, Prem Rawat has continued to travel extensively, speaking about peace to large and select audiences worldwide. On several occasions he has received recognition for his work and message of peace.

In 2001 he established The Prem Rawat Foundation (TPRF) to support his work and humanitarian efforts. Its Peace Education Program is licensed and utilized by correctional facilities and other service organizations around the world.

History

1957-1970

 
Prem Rawat in traditional mourning clothes, speaking after the death of his father in July 1966

Prem Pāl Singh Rawat was born in Haridwar, Uttarakhand northern India, on 10 December 1957, the fourth and youngest son of guru Hans Rām Singh Rawat and his second wife, Jagat Janani Mata Shri Rajeshwari Devi. Prem Rawat attended St. Joseph's Academy elementary school in his hometown of Dehra Dun.[7] At the age of four, he began speaking at his father's meetings, and at six his father taught him the "techniques of Knowledge." His father died in 1966, and during the customary 13 days of mourning, his mother and senior officials of the organization discussed the succession. Both his mother, Mata Ji, and eldest brother, Satpal Singh Rawat (known then as Bal Bhagwan Ji, and currently as Satpal Maharaj), were suggested as successors. Before either could be nominated, however, Prem Rawat addressed the crowd of mourners, reminding them that their master was immortal and still among them.[7] In response, his mother, brother and senior disciples accepted Prem Rawat as their Satguru, bowed to his feet and received his blessing.[7] Previously known to his father's followers as Sant Ji, Prem Rawat now assumed the title "Guru Maharaj Ji" and was called "Balyogeshwar" by others (roughly "born saint" or "born lord of Yogis") on account of his youth and spiritual precocity.[7][8][9][10] From that time, Prem Rawat spent his weekends and school holidays traveling as his father had, addressing audiences on the subject of Knowledge and inner peace. Because of his youth, effective control of the DLM was shared by the whole family.[3][11]

During the 1960s, Westerners in India searching for spiritual guidance met DLM members, and some became initiates or premies (from the Hindi prem, meaning "love".) British initiates invited him to visit the West, and in 1969 he sent a Mahatma, a close Indian student, to London on his behalf.[12] In 1970, many of his new Western followers flew to India to see him. They were present at India Gate, Delhi, when, still only twelve years old, he delivered an address known as the "Peace Bomb," which marked the start of his international work.[13][14]

 
Arriving in the US, Prem Rawat at Los Angeles Airport

1971–1975

In 1971, Prem Rawat traveled to the West against his mother's wishes.[15][16] His first western address was given in June 1971 at Glastonbury Fayre.[17] Author Ron Geaves theorises that "the convergence of Prem Rawat, formerly known as Guru Maharaj Ji, and Glastonbury Fayre in 1971 was a key event in understanding the jigsaw that came to be known as 'New Age' spirituality."[18]

He then went to Los Angeles, New York, Washington, Canada and South Africa. His arrival in the United States was met with some ridicule, as the teen-aged Rawat was seen as too immature to be a religious leader.[3][19] However, he generated great interest among young adults, who were willing to examine his claimed ability to give a direct experience of God.[3] Many were attracted by the sense of joy, peace and commitment shown by Prem Rawat's followers.[20] One witness said that Prem Rawat "played the whole time he was there ... he played with squirt guns, flashed pictures of himself for all to see, and took movies of everybody ... Love flowed back and forth between him and his devotees."[21] Enthusiastic new members spread the message that the 13-year-old Prem Rawat could reveal God.[22] He returned to India later that year with 300 westerners, stayed in the mission's ashrams.[12]

Prem Rawat started flying lessons when he was 13,[23] and jet training at age 15.[24] In 1972 two Cessna airplanes were obtained for his use.[25][26] Traveling almost constantly, he was reported to have residences in the United Kingdom, the United States, India, and Australia.[25][27]

The 1972 Hans Jayanti, an annual festival celebrating the birthday of Rawat's guru, was attended by over 500,000 people.[28] Six Jumbo jets were chartered by American followers who paid extra so that South Americans could fly from New York to India for free. Other countries made similar arrangements to help the less financially able.[29]

A reporter who attended an event in Boston in August 1973, which drew 9,000 attendees, wrote that Prem Rawat appeared humble and human, and seemed to intentionally undercut the claims of divinity made by followers.[30] Sociologist James Downton said that from his beginnings, Prem Rawat appealed to his followers to give up concepts and beliefs that might impede them from fully experiencing the Knowledge (or life force). This, however, did not prevent them from adopting a fairly rigid set of ideas about his divinity, and projecting millennial preconceptions onto him and the movement.[31]

Followers stressed "love, peace and happiness" in their lives, but public attitudes were often unsympathetic.[32] Sociologist Stephen A. Kent wrote that as a 22-year-old hippie, he found Prem Rawat's message to be banal and poorly delivered, though his companions spoke about it glowingly.[33]

In August 1973 while Prem Rawat was in Detroit to receive an award, he was slapped in the face with a shaving cream pie by Pat Halley, a radical journalist. Prem Rawat said that he did not want his attacker arrested or hurt, but Halley was attacked a few days later and injured.[34][35][36][37] When local members heard of the incident, they notified Prem Rawat, who requested that DLM conduct a full investigation. Two followers were identified as the assailants and the police were immediately notified. The Detroit police declined to initiate extradition proceedings. There was speculation that the lack of action may have been connected with Halley's radical politics.[38]

Prem Rawat's publicity campaign was unparalleled. One journalist reported,

Thousands of people follow him wherever he goes; posters of his round, cheerful face adorn the walls of buildings in every major Western city; newspaper reporters and TV cameras cover his every public appearance—particularly his mass rallies, which attract hundreds of thousands of followers each.[39]

A tour of US cities was cut short in early September 1973 when Prem Rawat was hospitalized with an intestinal ulcer. His physician said that his body, weakened by the pace of continual travel, showed the stresses of a middle-aged executive.[40]

The Hans Jayanti of 1973, named "Millennium '73", was held in the Houston Astrodome. Press releases said that the event would mark the beginning of "a thousand years of peace for people who want peace."[34][41] The main organizers were Prem Rawat's eldest brother Satpal Rawat and activist Rennie Davis, who predicted an attendance of 100,000 or more; the event attracted about 20,000. Although not covered by the national television news, it received extensive coverage in print media and was depicted in the award-winning US documentary "Lord of the Universe".[42] The premies were described as "cheerful, friendly and unruffled... nourished by their faith". To the 400 premie parents who attended, Prem Rawat was "a rehabilitator of prodigal sons and daughters". Some reporters, however, found "a confused jumble of inarticulately expressed ideas."[27][43] The event was called the "youth culture event of the year".[44]

The event's failure to meet expectations hurt the Divine Light Mission and left it heavily in debt, forcing changes within the movement. By 1976, the DLM was able to reduce the debt to $80,000.[45] According to Thomas Pilarzyk, the Millennium economic deficit was partly the result of poor management by the "holy family" (Prem Rawat's mother and three older brothers), and partly the much lower than anticipated attendance.[46]

Because of Prem Rawat's youth, his mother, Mata Ji, and eldest brother, Satpal Rawat, managed the affairs of the worldwide DLM. When Prem Rawat reached sixteen years of age he wanted to take a more active part in guiding the movement. According to the sociologist James V. Downton, this meant he "had to encroach on his mother's territory and, given the fact that she was accustomed to having control, a fight was inevitable".[12][47] In December 1973, Prem Rawat took administrative control of the Mission's US branch; his mother and Satpal returned to India.[48]

By the end of 1973, the DLM was active in 55 countries.[49] Tens of thousands had been initiated, and several hundred centers and dozens of ashrams were formed. 1973 has been called the "peak of the Mission's success".[8]

Rawat's upscale lifestyle was a source of controversy in the early 1970s.[50] Some media reports said that he "lived more like a king than a Messiah".[19] Critics alleged that his lifestyle was supported by the donations of followers and that the movement appeared to exist only to support his "opulent existence".[6][51] Supporters said there is no conflict between worldly and spiritual riches, and that Rawat did not advise anyone to "abandon the material world", but said it is our attachment to it that is wrong.[52] Press reports listed expensive automobiles such as Rolls-Royces, Mercedes-Benz limousines[27] and sports cars, some of them gifts.[53][54] Rawat said, "I have something far more precious to give them than money and material things—I give peace".[55] "Maharaj Ji's luxuries are gifts from a Western culture whose fruits are watches and Cadillacs", a spokesman said.[52] Some premies said that he did not want the gifts, but that people gave them out of their love for him.[56] They saw Rawat's lifestyle as an example of a lila, or divine play, which held a mirror to the "money-crazed and contraption-collecting society" of the West.[44]

In May 1974, a judge gave Prem Rawat consent to marry without parental permission.[57] His marriage to Marolyn Johnson, a 24-year-old follower from San Diego, California, was celebrated at a non-denominational church in Golden, Colorado.[58] Prem Rawat's mother, Mata Ji, had not been invited.[59]

Prem Rawat's marriage to a non-Indian finally severed his relationship with his mother.[6][48] She retained control of the Indian DLM and appointed Satpal as its leader.[48] Mata Ji said she was removing Prem Rawat as Perfect Master because of his "unspiritual" lifestyle and lack of respect for her wishes.[48][60][61] Rawat retained the support of the Western disciples. Most of the mahatmas either returned to India or were dismissed.[47] Prem Rawat had become wealthy as a result of contributions from his Western devotees, and led the life of an American millionaire. He ran a household for his wife, his brother (Raja Ji) and his sister-in-law (Claudia), and financed travel for the close officials and mahatmas who accompanied him on his frequent trips around the globe to attend the Mission's festivals.[47][62] By early 1974 the number of full-time DLM staff had increased from six to over one thousand.[29]

In November 1974, seeking more privacy for himself, his wife and his entourage following security concerns, Prem Rawat moved to a 4-acre (16,000 m2) property in Malibu, California.[63][64] Purchased by the DLM for $400,000, the property served as the DLM's West Coast headquarters.[63][64][65] Controversy around a helipad on the property[66] was resolved by installing emergency water storage for the Los Angeles County Fire Department and limiting the number of permitted flights.[67]

1976–2000

By 1976, most students viewed Prem Rawat primarily as a spiritual teacher, guide and inspiration.[68] In January 1976 Prem Rawat encouraged them to leave the ashrams and discard Indian customs and terminology.[69] He said that the organization had come between his devotees and himself.[70] He decentralized some decision making to local premie communities, while he maintained his status as the ultimate authority over spiritual and secular matters. The staff at the Denver headquarters were reduced from 250 to 80.[69] He described the managerial mentality that had grown in the Mission as "only cosmetic and totally unnecessary. It's like trying to take a cow and put lipstick on it. You can do it, but it's unnecessary in practical terms".[71]

His appearance on 20 December 1976 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, wearing a traditional Krishna costume for the first time since 1975, signaled a resurgence of Indian influence and devotion.[72] During 1977, many returned to ashram life, and there was a shift back from secular tendencies towards ritual and messianic beliefs.[69] In 1977 Rawat became a US citizen.[73]

In October 1978, the hillsides surrounding Rawat's Malibu estate were burned by a brushfire.[64] His family and the DLM headquarters subsequently moved to Miami Beach, Florida.[28] The family, which had grown to include four children, returned to Malibu in 1984.[28]

 
12 October 1981. Prem Rawat speaking at the Royal Albert Hall, London

During the '70s and '80s, the movement attracted substantial adverse publicity.[74] In January 1979 the Los Angeles Times reported that Rawat was maintaining his Malibu following despite a rising mistrust of cults.[64] Bob Mishler and Robert Hand, a former vice president of the movement, complained that money was increasingly diverted to Prem Rawat's personal use, and that the ideals of the group had become impossible to fulfill. The charges found little support and did not affect the progress of the Mission.[3]

In 1980, Rawat removed all the "religious" aspects of the movement and declared he now wanted "no movement whatsoever".[75] The Hindu references and religious parables that had been prominent in his teachings gave way to a focus on the meditation techniques. Once called "Perfect Master", Rawat abandoned his "almost divine status as guru"[3][6] but affirmed his status as a master. Scholars such as Kranenborg and Chryssides describe the departure from divine connotations.[76][77] In 1983 the Divine Light Mission was renamed Elan Vital and Rawat closed the last western ashrams, marking the end of his use of Indian methods for international objectives.[78]

Throughout this period, Rawat toured extensively. In one two-year period he spoke at over 100 programs in 37 international cities, including New York, London, Paris, Kuala Lumpur, Rome, Delhi, Sydney, Tokyo, Caracas and Los Angeles.[75][79]

In 1990 there were said to be 1.2 million followers worldwide, with 50,000 in the United States.[77] The year 1999 saw the commencement of regular satellite broadcasts to North America and other countries.[80]

2001 – present

In 2001, Prem Rawat founded The Prem Rawat Foundation (TPRF),[81] a Public Charitable Organization to support his message, and worldwide humanitarian efforts.

 
30 June 2003. Prem Rawat addressing the first "Conference on Peace" at the University of Salamanca, Spain

Writing in 2006, professor Ron Geaves, a long-time supporter of Rawat, noted how Elan Vital had explained that the only effective way of reaching out to the over 80 countries where Rawat's message was being promoted was by leased private jet, which Rawat self-piloted, flying around a quarter million miles a year.[12]

A biography of Rawat, Peace is Possible, by Andrea Cagan, was published in 2006 with a foreword by Emilio Colombo, former President of the European Parliament and Prime Minister of Italy.[82] In 2007, Rawat started the Peace Education Program for inmates which, as of 2012, operates in 25 prisons across 10 countries. Michael Gilbert, UTSA associate professor of criminal justice, stated that,"The constructive changes in behavior among participants have been noticed in our local Dominguez prison".[83]

In 2006, Pierre Weil, Rector of UNIPAZ in Florianopolis, Brazil - a campus of an 'International Peace University' non-profit organization - awarded Prem Rawat the honorary title of Ambassador of Peace.[84] In 2009, Prem Rawat was made Ambassador of Peace for the Basilicata region of Italy. In 2010, he spoke at the "Words of Peace for Europe" conference in Brussels, at the invitation of European Parliament Vice-President Gianni Pittella.[85][86]

In 2011, he again spoke at the Brussels conference, "Peace and Prosperity. Founding Values of the European Union."[87] At this conference, he was named ambassador of the Brussels Declaration “Pledge to Peace,” signed at the European Parliament. The Pledge to Peace was inspired by the principles of freedom, equality and solidarity enshrined in the preamble of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. The Declaration of Intent encourages signatory governments, organizations, and companies to act independently in the design and development of peace projects.[88]

In 2012, in Malaysia, Prem Rawat was awarded the Asia Pacific Brands Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award, "for his contributions in championing and promoting global peace."[89][90][91][92]

In 2016, Prem Rawat delivered the keynote address at a forum hosted by TPRF and the Tutu Foundation UK at the British Film Institute in London. Government officials and NGO leaders met to explore peace education, reconciliation, alternatives to violence, prison reform and breaking the cycle of crime.[93][third-party source needed]

In March 2021, the Italian Ministry of Justice, Department of Penitentiary Administration, signed a Memorandum of Understanding to implement the Peace Education Program for inmates' rehabilitation.[94] In April 2021, a similar agreement was signed with the South African government to implement this Program throughout the country's correctional centres.[95]

On 17 June 2022, 51 years after he spoke at the Glastonbury Music Festival in June 1971,[96] Prem Rawat received the first “Key of Avalon” award from the Council of Glastonbury, United Kingdom, in recognition of fifty years of working for peace across the world and his services to humanity.[97]

Rawat is mentioned in the Guinness Book of World Records: "The largest audience at a book reading for a single author is 114,704 and was achieved by Prem Rawat (USA), in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India, on 2 April 2023. The author read chapter 3 of his latest book “Hear Yourself” in Hindi to a ticket paying audience. The attempt was held at the Mata Ramabai Ambedkar Maidan in Lucknow." [98][99]

Teachings

The core of Prem Rawat's teaching is that the individual's need for fulfillment can be satisfied by turning within to contact a constant source of peace and joy. Rather than a body of dogma, he emphasizes a direct experience of transcendence that he says is accessible through the meditation techniques he teaches.

A number of scholars have said that Prem Rawat's teachings began in the North Indian Sant Mat or Radhasoami tradition,[3] which dismisses ritual and claims that true religion is a matter of loving and surrendering to God who dwells in the heart.[100][101] Geaves argues that this is not quite correct; referring to Rawat's own statements about his lineage,[102][103] he places Rawat and his father within the tradition established by Totapuri, which also gave rise to the Advait Mat movement.[103] Geaves argues that while the teachings within Totapuri's lineage have similarities with those of the Radhasoami tradition and developed in the same geographical area,[104] they are nevertheless distinct. He adds that Rawat "is unusual in that he does not consider his lineage to be significant and does not perceive his authority as resting in a tradition."[102]

Rawat has been criticized for a lack of intellectual content in his public discourses.[3][4][33]

Techniques of Knowledge

Prem Rawat states that light, love, wisdom and clarity exist within each individual, and that the meditation techniques which he teaches, and which he learned from his teacher, are a way of accessing them. These techniques are known as the 'Knowledge'. In his public talks he quotes from Hindu, Muslim and Christian scriptures, but he relies on this inner experience for his inspiration and guidance.[105][106][107][6]

Before they receive the "Knowledge", Rawat asks practitioners to promise to give it a fair chance and to stay in touch with him. He also asks that they not reveal the techniques to anyone else, but allow others to prepare to receive the experience for themselves.[108]

Practitioners describe "Knowledge" as internal and highly individual, with no associated social structure, liturgy, ethical practices or articles of faith.[6] According to sociologist Alan E. Aldridge, Prem Rawat says he offers practical ways to achieve spiritual tranquillity that can be used by anyone. Aldridge writes that Rawat originally aspired to bring about world peace, but now he places his attention on helping individuals rather than society.[109]

George Chryssides describes what Prem Rawat terms 'Knowledge' as based on self-understanding and an inner self, identical with the divine.[110]

Bibliography

  • „Hear Yourself – How to find peace in a noisy world“ Audiobook. HarperAudio, September 2021, ISBN 978-0063070776
  • „Hear Yourself – Inneren Frieden finden in einer lauten Welt“ Piper, 30. Juni 2022, EAN 978-3-492-07102-4
  • „Hear Yourself – How to find peace in a noisy world“ Harper One, 30. September 2021, ISBN 978-0-06-307074-5
  • „Apprendre à s’écouter – Comment trouver la paix dans la bruit du monde“ Hrsg. POINTS, 1. April 2021, ISBN 978-2757886670
  • „Escùchate – Encuentra la pazt en un mondo ruidoso“ Aguilar, 13. Februar 2020, ISBN 978-84-03-52166-7
  • „Impara Ad Ascoltari – Capire se stressi oltre il rumore del mondo“ Rizzoli, 5. Sep. 2020, EAN 9788817146494
  • „Cuando el desierto florece – El libro que hace brotar tu sonorisa interior“ Penguin Random House 31. Juli 2018, ISBN 978-8403516205
  • „Der Papagei, der alles wusste und nichts konnte – Weisheiten, die glücklich machen“ Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 5. März 2018, ISBN 978-3579087030
  • „Peace Is Possible: Thoughts on happiness, success and relationship for a deeper understanding of life“ Penguin, 6. Juni 2019, ISBN 978-0-241-38544-9
  • „Quando il deserto fiorisce – Il libro che farà abbociare il tuo sorriso interior“ Varia, 16. Juli 2019, ISBN 978-8817105392
  • „Splitting The Arrow – Understanding the Business of Life“ Hrsg. BUNYA LLC 2015, ISBN 978-4907298012
  • „The Greatest Truth Of All“ CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2012, ISBN 9781481028875

Mighty River Press published a biography of Prem Rawat in 15 November 2007, written by Andrea Cagan: "Peace Is Possible. The Life and Message of Prem Rawat" ISBN 9780978869496

Organizations

Rawat inherited the first organization he was associated with (Divine Light Mission) from his father. Moving away from the trappings of Indian culture and religion, he later established Elan Vital and Words of Peace International, independent of culture, beliefs and lifestyles, and not bound to the traditions of India. The Prem Rawat Foundation (TPRF) founded in 2001, added more focus to humanitarian efforts.

Divine Light Mission

The Divine Light Mission (Divya Sandesh Parishad; DLM) was an organization founded in 1960 by guru Hans Rawat for his following in northern India. During the 1970s, the DLM gained prominence in the West under the leadership of his fourth and youngest son, Prem Rawat. Some scholars noted the influence of the Bhagavad Gita and the Sant Mat tradition, but the western movement was widely seen as a new religious movement, a cult, a charismatic religious sect or an alternative religion.[111] DLM officials said the movement represented a church rather than a religion.[112]

Elan Vital and Words of Peace International

DLM was disbanded when Prem Rawat renounced the trappings of Indian culture and religion, making his teachings independent of culture, beliefs and lifestyles.[113] The DLM in the United States changed its name to Elan Vital in 1983, by filing an entity name change.[114] Elan Vital became the name shared by several organizations supporting the work of Rawat. Independent Elan Vital organizations in several countries engaged in raising funds, organising speaking engagements by Rawat and in some cases broadcast his public addresses. Currently, Elan Vital is no longer connected to its originally Hindu or Sikh religious background. Elan Vital, Inc. in the U.S. is registered as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. It has been labelled a "church" in reference to its tax status.[115] Its 2005 articles of incorporation described its purpose as performing "religious, charitable and educational activities". The Elan Vital website states that Elan Vital ceased operations in 2010, and has been succeeded by new entities such as Words of Peace International, Inc.[116]

The Prem Rawat Foundation and others

In 2001, Prem Rawat founded The Prem Rawat Foundation (TPRF),[81] a Public Charitable Organization for the production and distribution of materials promoting his message, and also for funding worldwide humanitarian efforts. TPRF has provided food, water and medical help to war-torn and impoverished areas.[117]

The Peace Education Program (PEP), founded by TPRF, is a media-based educational program that helps participants explore the possibility of personal peace, and to discover personal resources – tools for living such as inner strength, choice, appreciation and hope. The program, not only successful in some educational institutions, had by 2012 also been adopted by 28 prisons in 10 countries including the United States, South Africa, India, Spain, Ireland, the U.K. and Australia.[118] The voluntary program takes inmates onto a unique route of rehabilitation involving self-discovery, and hopes of a fulfilled life, within or without the prison walls.[2]

Reception

Media

From Prem Rawat's first travels in the West, he and his followers attracted media attention. In an interview in Der Spiegel in 1973, Prem Rawat said, "I have lost confidence in newspapers. I talk with them [about this] and the next day something completely different is printed."[119] In 1973, the Divine Light Mission's 50-member public relations team concluded that Prem Rawat's credibility had been compromised by his youth, his physical appearance, and the Rolls-Royce, as well as the Detroit "pieing" incident and an allegation of smuggling (which was never prosecuted). The head of the team said that they needed to get the public to look past these factors to judge Prem Rawat's credibility.[120]

Rawat commented on criticism during an interview on a Taiwan News channel in June 2014,[121] "So far I'm concerned, my focus in life is not to appease critics, but is to bring the message of peace to people. ... When you've been doing what I have been doing for 5 decades plus, yes you're gonna get critics. ... People said, "He's going to fade away." Well, how about fifty-two years. And I'm still doing strong, because it is about my conviction. And my conviction is "peace is possible". And I will do everything that I must do, because it's important to me that people find that peace in their life."[122]

Biographer Andrea Cagan described Rawat as a man who loves life and is focused "on spreading the message of peace."[82]

In 2014, independent filmmaker Cynthia Fitzpatrick produced Inside Peace, a documentary about several inmates who had participated in TPRF's Peace Education Program while incarcerated at Dominguez State Prison, Texas. Premiering in 2015 in the United States and the United Kingdom to a positive critical response, Inside Peace received several awards. PBS aired the film across the United States in 2018.[123][124]

In 2019, Penguin Random House published Prem Rawat’s book, Peace Is Possible - Thoughts on happiness, success and relationships for a deeper understanding of life.[125] In 2020, Penguin Random House also released Prem Rawat’s book, Escúchate, the Spanish-language edition of Hear Yourself.[126] The English version was released by Harper-Collins on 14 September 2021.[127]

Sociologists' views: leadership type

Several scholars referred to Max Weber's classification of authority when describing Rawat as a charismatic leader.[4][128][129]

J. Gordon Melton said Prem Rawat's personal charisma was one of the reasons for the rapid spread of his message among members of the 1960s counterculture.[130]

Thomas Pilarzyk, a sociologist, wrote in a 1978 paper that the distribution of power and authority in the DLM was officially based on the charismatic appeal of Maharaj Ji, which he described as being somewhat ambiguous, and that many followers were not certain about his position in the organizational scheme of the movement, or the claim that he was the only true spiritual master.[131]

By the early 1980s Meredith McGuire, a professor of sociology and anthropology, saw a process of formalization (transition of charismatic to rational management), resulting from Rawat's desire to consolidate his power and authority over the movement in the United States.[132]

Around the same time, Paul Schnabel, a sociologist, described Rawat as a pure example of a charismatic leader. He characterized Rawat as materialistic, pampered and intellectually unremarkable compared to Osho, but no less charismatic.[4]

Lucy DuPertuis, a sociologist and one-time follower who assisted James V. Downton with his book about the Divine Light Mission, described Rawat's role as a Master as emerging from three interrelated phenomena: traditional or theological definitions of Satguru; adherents' first-hand experiences of the Master; and communal accounts and discussions of the Master among devotees.[133]

David G. Bromley described Prem Rawat and other founders of new religions as being held in awe by their early followers, who ascribe extraordinary powers to them that set them apart from other human beings.[134] When describing the difficulty of charismatic leaders in proving to be above normal human failings such as not to suffer ill health or indulge in worldly pursuits, he used Rawat's marriage as an example.[135]

Stephen J. Hunt described Prem Rawat's major focus as being on stillness, peace and contentment within the individual, with his 'Knowledge' consisting of the techniques to obtain these.[136] According to Hunt, in Rawat's case the notion of spiritual growth is not derived – as is traditionally the case with other gurus – from his personal charisma, but from the nature of his teachings and the benefits to the individuals applying them.[137]

Ron Geaves, a professor in various fields of religion and long-time adherent of Rawat, wrote that Rawat is not a renunciate, and that he has made great efforts to assert his humanity and take apart the hagiography that has developed around him.[12] According to Geaves Rawat, rather than considering himself a charismatic leader, deemphasizes the sealing of the master disciple relationship, and focuses on correct practice and staying in touch through participation or listening.[138][139]

Following

Estimates of the number of Prem Rawat's adherents have varied widely over time. Petersen stated that Rawat claimed 7 million disciples worldwide in 1973, with 60,000 in the US.[140] Rudin & Rudin gave a worldwide following of 6 million in 1974, of which 50,000 were in the US. According to these authors, the adherents had fallen to 1.2 million for Prem Rawat's personal worldwide following in 1980, with 15,000 in the US.[141] Spencer J. Palmer and Roger R. Keller published a general DLM membership of 1.2 million worldwide, with 50,000 in the US, in 1990 and 1997.[142]

James V. Downton, who studied Prem Rawat's followers for five years in the 70s, said "these young people had a spiritual experience which deeply affected them and changed the course of their lives. It was an experience which moved many to tears of joy, for they had found the answer they had been seeking".[143] Downton said by 1976 the vast majority of students viewed Rawat "as their spiritual teacher, guide and inspiration". Quoting a student he had studied, Downton said a typical view was that "the only thing he (Rawat) wants is to see people living happily and harmoniously together".[144] Downton concluded that the students had changed in a positive way, "more peaceful, loving, confident and appreciative of life".[145]

Paul Schnabel referenced professor in the psychology of religion Van der Lans saying that among his Western students, Rawat appeared to stimulate an uncritical attitude, which gave them an opportunity to project their fantasies of divinity onto his person. According to Schnabel, the divine nature of the guru is a standard element of Eastern religion, but removed from its cultural context, and confounded with the Western understanding of God as a father, what is lost is the difference between the guru's person and that which the guru symbolizes—resulting in what was described as limitless personality worship.[146] Stephen Hunt wrote that Western followers do not see themselves as members of a religion, but rather as adherents of a system of teachings focused on the goal of enjoying life to the full.[6]

Former followers became known as "ex-premies".[79][147][148][149]

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  • Macgregor, John. "Blinded by the Light" in Good Weekend, Sydney (Australia), 31 August 2002.
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  • Melton, J. Gordon. (1986). The encyclopedic handbook of cults in America. Garland reference library of social science, v. 213. New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 978-0-8240-9036-4.
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  • Metz, Cade (6 February 2008). "Wikipedia ruled by 'Lord of the Universe'". The Register. Retrieved 14 October 2008.
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  • Morgan, Ted (9 December 1973). "Oz in the Astrodome; The guru enthroned". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 October 2008.
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  • Petersen, William J. (December 1982). Those Curious New Cults in the 80's (Revised ed.). Keats Pub. p. 307. ISBN 0-87983-317-3.
  • Pilarzyk, Thomas (1978). "The Origin, Development, and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion: An Application of Sectarianization Theory". Review of Religious Research. Religious Research Association, Inc. 20 (1): 23–43. doi:10.2307/3509939. ISSN 0034-673X. JSTOR 3509939.
  • Price, Maeve (1979). "The Divine Light Mission as a social organization". Sociological Review. 27 (2): 279–296. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954X.1979.tb00335.x. S2CID 144659402.
  • Pryor, William, The Survival of the Coolest: A Darwin's Death Defying Journey into the Interior of Addiction (2004), Clear Press, ISBN 1-904555-13-6
  • Rawat, Prem and Wolf, Burt. Inner Journey: A spirited conversation about self-discovery (DVD). ISBN 0-9740627-0-7
  • Rawat, Prem, Maharaji at Griffith University (2004) ISBN 0-9740627-2-3
  • (in Dutch) Schnabel, Paul. Tussen stigma en charisma: nieuwe religieuze bewegingen en geestelijke volksgezondheid ("Between stigma and charisma: new religious movements and mental health"). Erasmus University Rotterdam, Faculty of Medicine, PhD thesis, 1982. Deventer, Van Loghum Slaterus, ISBN 90-6001-746-3. Available online at DBNL
  • Schomer, Karine; W.H. McLeod (1987). The Sants : studies in a devotional tradition of India (1st ed.). Berkeley Calif.; Delhi: Berkeley Religious Studies Series;;Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-0-961220-80-8.
  • Siebers, Tobin (1993). Religion and the authority of the past. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-10489-5.
  • The Prem Rawat Foundation presents: Maharaji at Sanders Theatre, Harvard University (2005) ISBN 0-9740627-3-1
  • United States.;Kirschner Associates.;Institute for the Study of American Religion. (2001). Religious requirements and practices of certain selected groups : a handbook for chaplains. Honolulu HI: University Press of the Pacific [for] U.S. Dept. of Defense Dept. of the Army Office of the Chief of Chaplains. ISBN 978-0-89875-607-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • . Hinduism Today. Himalayan Academy. October 1983. ISSN 0896-0801. Archived from the original on 23 June 2010.

External links

  • Prem Rawat's personal website
  • The Prem Rawat Foundation

prem, rawat, prem, singh, rawat, born, december, 1957, formerly, known, maharaji, indian, international, speaker, author, teachings, include, meditation, practice, calls, knowledge, peace, education, based, discovery, personal, resources, such, inner, strength. Prem Pal Singh Rawat born 10 December 1957 formerly known as Maharaji is an Indian international speaker and author His teachings include a meditation practice he calls Knowledge 1 and peace education based on the discovery of personal resources such as inner strength choice appreciation and hope 2 Prem RawatPrem Rawat in Barcelona Spain in 2018BornPrem Pal Singh Rawat 1957 12 10 10 December 1957 age 65 Haridwar IndiaNationalityIndian AmericanOther names Guru MaharajiOccupationSpeakerYears active1966 presentOrganization s The Prem Rawat FoundationWords of PeaceElan VitalDivine Light MissionKnown forPeace Education ProgramMillennium 73 Peace Bomb addressSpouseMarolyn RawatChildren4ParentsHans Rawat father Rajeshwari Devi mother RelativesSatpal Rawat brother Rajaji Rawat brother Amrita Rawat sister in law Navi Rawat niece AwardsLifetime Achievement Award of Asia Pacific Brands FoundationWebsitepremrawat wbr comPrem Rawat is the youngest son of Hans Ram Singh Rawat an Indian guru and the founder of the Divya Sandesh Parishad later known as Divine Light Mission DLM After his father s death eight year old Prem Rawat assumed his role At 13 he traveled to the West and took up residence in the United States When young adults took interest in his message the movement grew by tens of thousands Many in the news media were perplexed by his youth and claims of divine status he was also criticized for a lack of intellectual content in his public discourses 3 4 and for leading an opulent lifestyle 5 6 Prem Rawat s marriage at the age of 16 to a non Indian severed his relationship with his mother At that point the Indian branch of DLM controlled by his mother split from DLM everywhere else at that point it was established in 55 countries In the early 1980s he began to discard references to religion in his speeches and closed the ashrams The name of the DLM was changed to Elan Vital Since that time Prem Rawat has continued to travel extensively speaking about peace to large and select audiences worldwide On several occasions he has received recognition for his work and message of peace In 2001 he established The Prem Rawat Foundation TPRF to support his work and humanitarian efforts Its Peace Education Program is licensed and utilized by correctional facilities and other service organizations around the world Contents 1 History 1 1 1957 1970 1 2 1971 1975 1 3 1976 2000 1 4 2001 present 2 Teachings 2 1 Techniques of Knowledge 3 Bibliography 4 Organizations 4 1 Divine Light Mission 4 2 Elan Vital and Words of Peace International 4 3 The Prem Rawat Foundation and others 5 Reception 5 1 Media 5 2 Sociologists views leadership type 5 3 Following 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksHistory1957 1970 Further information Hans Ji Maharaj Prem Rawat in traditional mourning clothes speaking after the death of his father in July 1966Prem Pal Singh Rawat was born in Haridwar Uttarakhand northern India on 10 December 1957 the fourth and youngest son of guru Hans Ram Singh Rawat and his second wife Jagat Janani Mata Shri Rajeshwari Devi Prem Rawat attended St Joseph s Academy elementary school in his hometown of Dehra Dun 7 At the age of four he began speaking at his father s meetings and at six his father taught him the techniques of Knowledge His father died in 1966 and during the customary 13 days of mourning his mother and senior officials of the organization discussed the succession Both his mother Mata Ji and eldest brother Satpal Singh Rawat known then as Bal Bhagwan Ji and currently as Satpal Maharaj were suggested as successors Before either could be nominated however Prem Rawat addressed the crowd of mourners reminding them that their master was immortal and still among them 7 In response his mother brother and senior disciples accepted Prem Rawat as their Satguru bowed to his feet and received his blessing 7 Previously known to his father s followers as Sant Ji Prem Rawat now assumed the title Guru Maharaj Ji and was called Balyogeshwar by others roughly born saint or born lord of Yogis on account of his youth and spiritual precocity 7 8 9 10 From that time Prem Rawat spent his weekends and school holidays traveling as his father had addressing audiences on the subject of Knowledge and inner peace Because of his youth effective control of the DLM was shared by the whole family 3 11 During the 1960s Westerners in India searching for spiritual guidance met DLM members and some became initiates or premies from the Hindi prem meaning love British initiates invited him to visit the West and in 1969 he sent a Mahatma a close Indian student to London on his behalf 12 In 1970 many of his new Western followers flew to India to see him They were present at India Gate Delhi when still only twelve years old he delivered an address known as the Peace Bomb which marked the start of his international work 13 14 Arriving in the US Prem Rawat at Los Angeles Airport1971 1975 In 1971 Prem Rawat traveled to the West against his mother s wishes 15 16 His first western address was given in June 1971 at Glastonbury Fayre 17 Author Ron Geaves theorises that the convergence of Prem Rawat formerly known as Guru Maharaj Ji and Glastonbury Fayre in 1971 was a key event in understanding the jigsaw that came to be known as New Age spirituality 18 He then went to Los Angeles New York Washington Canada and South Africa His arrival in the United States was met with some ridicule as the teen aged Rawat was seen as too immature to be a religious leader 3 19 However he generated great interest among young adults who were willing to examine his claimed ability to give a direct experience of God 3 Many were attracted by the sense of joy peace and commitment shown by Prem Rawat s followers 20 One witness said that Prem Rawat played the whole time he was there he played with squirt guns flashed pictures of himself for all to see and took movies of everybody Love flowed back and forth between him and his devotees 21 Enthusiastic new members spread the message that the 13 year old Prem Rawat could reveal God 22 He returned to India later that year with 300 westerners stayed in the mission s ashrams 12 Prem Rawat started flying lessons when he was 13 23 and jet training at age 15 24 In 1972 two Cessna airplanes were obtained for his use 25 26 Traveling almost constantly he was reported to have residences in the United Kingdom the United States India and Australia 25 27 The 1972 Hans Jayanti an annual festival celebrating the birthday of Rawat s guru was attended by over 500 000 people 28 Six Jumbo jets were chartered by American followers who paid extra so that South Americans could fly from New York to India for free Other countries made similar arrangements to help the less financially able 29 A reporter who attended an event in Boston in August 1973 which drew 9 000 attendees wrote that Prem Rawat appeared humble and human and seemed to intentionally undercut the claims of divinity made by followers 30 Sociologist James Downton said that from his beginnings Prem Rawat appealed to his followers to give up concepts and beliefs that might impede them from fully experiencing the Knowledge or life force This however did not prevent them from adopting a fairly rigid set of ideas about his divinity and projecting millennial preconceptions onto him and the movement 31 Followers stressed love peace and happiness in their lives but public attitudes were often unsympathetic 32 Sociologist Stephen A Kent wrote that as a 22 year old hippie he found Prem Rawat s message to be banal and poorly delivered though his companions spoke about it glowingly 33 In August 1973 while Prem Rawat was in Detroit to receive an award he was slapped in the face with a shaving cream pie by Pat Halley a radical journalist Prem Rawat said that he did not want his attacker arrested or hurt but Halley was attacked a few days later and injured 34 35 36 37 When local members heard of the incident they notified Prem Rawat who requested that DLM conduct a full investigation Two followers were identified as the assailants and the police were immediately notified The Detroit police declined to initiate extradition proceedings There was speculation that the lack of action may have been connected with Halley s radical politics 38 Prem Rawat s publicity campaign was unparalleled One journalist reported Thousands of people follow him wherever he goes posters of his round cheerful face adorn the walls of buildings in every major Western city newspaper reporters and TV cameras cover his every public appearance particularly his mass rallies which attract hundreds of thousands of followers each 39 A tour of US cities was cut short in early September 1973 when Prem Rawat was hospitalized with an intestinal ulcer His physician said that his body weakened by the pace of continual travel showed the stresses of a middle aged executive 40 The Hans Jayanti of 1973 named Millennium 73 was held in the Houston Astrodome Press releases said that the event would mark the beginning of a thousand years of peace for people who want peace 34 41 The main organizers were Prem Rawat s eldest brother Satpal Rawat and activist Rennie Davis who predicted an attendance of 100 000 or more the event attracted about 20 000 Although not covered by the national television news it received extensive coverage in print media and was depicted in the award winning US documentary Lord of the Universe 42 The premies were described as cheerful friendly and unruffled nourished by their faith To the 400 premie parents who attended Prem Rawat was a rehabilitator of prodigal sons and daughters Some reporters however found a confused jumble of inarticulately expressed ideas 27 43 The event was called the youth culture event of the year 44 The event s failure to meet expectations hurt the Divine Light Mission and left it heavily in debt forcing changes within the movement By 1976 the DLM was able to reduce the debt to 80 000 45 According to Thomas Pilarzyk the Millennium economic deficit was partly the result of poor management by the holy family Prem Rawat s mother and three older brothers and partly the much lower than anticipated attendance 46 Because of Prem Rawat s youth his mother Mata Ji and eldest brother Satpal Rawat managed the affairs of the worldwide DLM When Prem Rawat reached sixteen years of age he wanted to take a more active part in guiding the movement According to the sociologist James V Downton this meant he had to encroach on his mother s territory and given the fact that she was accustomed to having control a fight was inevitable 12 47 In December 1973 Prem Rawat took administrative control of the Mission s US branch his mother and Satpal returned to India 48 By the end of 1973 the DLM was active in 55 countries 49 Tens of thousands had been initiated and several hundred centers and dozens of ashrams were formed 1973 has been called the peak of the Mission s success 8 Rawat s upscale lifestyle was a source of controversy in the early 1970s 50 Some media reports said that he lived more like a king than a Messiah 19 Critics alleged that his lifestyle was supported by the donations of followers and that the movement appeared to exist only to support his opulent existence 6 51 Supporters said there is no conflict between worldly and spiritual riches and that Rawat did not advise anyone to abandon the material world but said it is our attachment to it that is wrong 52 Press reports listed expensive automobiles such as Rolls Royces Mercedes Benz limousines 27 and sports cars some of them gifts 53 54 Rawat said I have something far more precious to give them than money and material things I give peace 55 Maharaj Ji s luxuries are gifts from a Western culture whose fruits are watches and Cadillacs a spokesman said 52 Some premies said that he did not want the gifts but that people gave them out of their love for him 56 They saw Rawat s lifestyle as an example of a lila or divine play which held a mirror to the money crazed and contraption collecting society of the West 44 In May 1974 a judge gave Prem Rawat consent to marry without parental permission 57 His marriage to Marolyn Johnson a 24 year old follower from San Diego California was celebrated at a non denominational church in Golden Colorado 58 Prem Rawat s mother Mata Ji had not been invited 59 Prem Rawat s marriage to a non Indian finally severed his relationship with his mother 6 48 She retained control of the Indian DLM and appointed Satpal as its leader 48 Mata Ji said she was removing Prem Rawat as Perfect Master because of his unspiritual lifestyle and lack of respect for her wishes 48 60 61 Rawat retained the support of the Western disciples Most of the mahatmas either returned to India or were dismissed 47 Prem Rawat had become wealthy as a result of contributions from his Western devotees and led the life of an American millionaire He ran a household for his wife his brother Raja Ji and his sister in law Claudia and financed travel for the close officials and mahatmas who accompanied him on his frequent trips around the globe to attend the Mission s festivals 47 62 By early 1974 the number of full time DLM staff had increased from six to over one thousand 29 In November 1974 seeking more privacy for himself his wife and his entourage following security concerns Prem Rawat moved to a 4 acre 16 000 m2 property in Malibu California 63 64 Purchased by the DLM for 400 000 the property served as the DLM s West Coast headquarters 63 64 65 Controversy around a helipad on the property 66 was resolved by installing emergency water storage for the Los Angeles County Fire Department and limiting the number of permitted flights 67 1976 2000 By 1976 most students viewed Prem Rawat primarily as a spiritual teacher guide and inspiration 68 In January 1976 Prem Rawat encouraged them to leave the ashrams and discard Indian customs and terminology 69 He said that the organization had come between his devotees and himself 70 He decentralized some decision making to local premie communities while he maintained his status as the ultimate authority over spiritual and secular matters The staff at the Denver headquarters were reduced from 250 to 80 69 He described the managerial mentality that had grown in the Mission as only cosmetic and totally unnecessary It s like trying to take a cow and put lipstick on it You can do it but it s unnecessary in practical terms 71 His appearance on 20 December 1976 in Atlantic City New Jersey wearing a traditional Krishna costume for the first time since 1975 signaled a resurgence of Indian influence and devotion 72 During 1977 many returned to ashram life and there was a shift back from secular tendencies towards ritual and messianic beliefs 69 In 1977 Rawat became a US citizen 73 In October 1978 the hillsides surrounding Rawat s Malibu estate were burned by a brushfire 64 His family and the DLM headquarters subsequently moved to Miami Beach Florida 28 The family which had grown to include four children returned to Malibu in 1984 28 12 October 1981 Prem Rawat speaking at the Royal Albert Hall LondonDuring the 70s and 80s the movement attracted substantial adverse publicity 74 In January 1979 the Los Angeles Times reported that Rawat was maintaining his Malibu following despite a rising mistrust of cults 64 Bob Mishler and Robert Hand a former vice president of the movement complained that money was increasingly diverted to Prem Rawat s personal use and that the ideals of the group had become impossible to fulfill The charges found little support and did not affect the progress of the Mission 3 In 1980 Rawat removed all the religious aspects of the movement and declared he now wanted no movement whatsoever 75 The Hindu references and religious parables that had been prominent in his teachings gave way to a focus on the meditation techniques Once called Perfect Master Rawat abandoned his almost divine status as guru 3 6 but affirmed his status as a master Scholars such as Kranenborg and Chryssides describe the departure from divine connotations 76 77 In 1983 the Divine Light Mission was renamed Elan Vital and Rawat closed the last western ashrams marking the end of his use of Indian methods for international objectives 78 Throughout this period Rawat toured extensively In one two year period he spoke at over 100 programs in 37 international cities including New York London Paris Kuala Lumpur Rome Delhi Sydney Tokyo Caracas and Los Angeles 75 79 In 1990 there were said to be 1 2 million followers worldwide with 50 000 in the United States 77 The year 1999 saw the commencement of regular satellite broadcasts to North America and other countries 80 2001 present In 2001 Prem Rawat founded The Prem Rawat Foundation TPRF 81 a Public Charitable Organization to support his message and worldwide humanitarian efforts 30 June 2003 Prem Rawat addressing the first Conference on Peace at the University of Salamanca SpainWriting in 2006 professor Ron Geaves a long time supporter of Rawat noted how Elan Vital had explained that the only effective way of reaching out to the over 80 countries where Rawat s message was being promoted was by leased private jet which Rawat self piloted flying around a quarter million miles a year 12 A biography of Rawat Peace is Possible by Andrea Cagan was published in 2006 with a foreword by Emilio Colombo former President of the European Parliament and Prime Minister of Italy 82 In 2007 Rawat started the Peace Education Program for inmates which as of 2012 operates in 25 prisons across 10 countries Michael Gilbert UTSA associate professor of criminal justice stated that The constructive changes in behavior among participants have been noticed in our local Dominguez prison 83 In 2006 Pierre Weil Rector of UNIPAZ in Florianopolis Brazil a campus of an International Peace University non profit organization awarded Prem Rawat the honorary title of Ambassador of Peace 84 In 2009 Prem Rawat was made Ambassador of Peace for the Basilicata region of Italy In 2010 he spoke at the Words of Peace for Europe conference in Brussels at the invitation of European Parliament Vice President Gianni Pittella 85 86 In 2011 he again spoke at the Brussels conference Peace and Prosperity Founding Values of the European Union 87 At this conference he was named ambassador of the Brussels Declaration Pledge to Peace signed at the European Parliament The Pledge to Peace was inspired by the principles of freedom equality and solidarity enshrined in the preamble of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union The Declaration of Intent encourages signatory governments organizations and companies to act independently in the design and development of peace projects 88 In 2012 in Malaysia Prem Rawat was awarded the Asia Pacific Brands Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award for his contributions in championing and promoting global peace 89 90 91 92 In 2016 Prem Rawat delivered the keynote address at a forum hosted by TPRF and the Tutu Foundation UK at the British Film Institute in London Government officials and NGO leaders met to explore peace education reconciliation alternatives to violence prison reform and breaking the cycle of crime 93 third party source needed In March 2021 the Italian Ministry of Justice Department of Penitentiary Administration signed a Memorandum of Understanding to implement the Peace Education Program for inmates rehabilitation 94 In April 2021 a similar agreement was signed with the South African government to implement this Program throughout the country s correctional centres 95 On 17 June 2022 51 years after he spoke at the Glastonbury Music Festival in June 1971 96 Prem Rawat received the first Key of Avalon award from the Council of Glastonbury United Kingdom in recognition of fifty years of working for peace across the world and his services to humanity 97 Rawat is mentioned in the Guinness Book of World Records The largest audience at a book reading for a single author is 114 704 and was achieved by Prem Rawat USA in Lucknow Uttar Pradesh India on 2 April 2023 The author read chapter 3 of his latest book Hear Yourself in Hindi to a ticket paying audience The attempt was held at the Mata Ramabai Ambedkar Maidan in Lucknow 98 99 TeachingsMain article Teachings of Prem Rawat The core of Prem Rawat s teaching is that the individual s need for fulfillment can be satisfied by turning within to contact a constant source of peace and joy Rather than a body of dogma he emphasizes a direct experience of transcendence that he says is accessible through the meditation techniques he teaches A number of scholars have said that Prem Rawat s teachings began in the North Indian Sant Mat or Radhasoami tradition 3 which dismisses ritual and claims that true religion is a matter of loving and surrendering to God who dwells in the heart 100 101 Geaves argues that this is not quite correct referring to Rawat s own statements about his lineage 102 103 he places Rawat and his father within the tradition established by Totapuri which also gave rise to the Advait Mat movement 103 Geaves argues that while the teachings within Totapuri s lineage have similarities with those of the Radhasoami tradition and developed in the same geographical area 104 they are nevertheless distinct He adds that Rawat is unusual in that he does not consider his lineage to be significant and does not perceive his authority as resting in a tradition 102 Rawat has been criticized for a lack of intellectual content in his public discourses 3 4 33 Techniques of Knowledge Main article Techniques of Knowledge Prem Rawat states that light love wisdom and clarity exist within each individual and that the meditation techniques which he teaches and which he learned from his teacher are a way of accessing them These techniques are known as the Knowledge In his public talks he quotes from Hindu Muslim and Christian scriptures but he relies on this inner experience for his inspiration and guidance 105 106 107 6 Before they receive the Knowledge Rawat asks practitioners to promise to give it a fair chance and to stay in touch with him He also asks that they not reveal the techniques to anyone else but allow others to prepare to receive the experience for themselves 108 Practitioners describe Knowledge as internal and highly individual with no associated social structure liturgy ethical practices or articles of faith 6 According to sociologist Alan E Aldridge Prem Rawat says he offers practical ways to achieve spiritual tranquillity that can be used by anyone Aldridge writes that Rawat originally aspired to bring about world peace but now he places his attention on helping individuals rather than society 109 George Chryssides describes what Prem Rawat terms Knowledge as based on self understanding and an inner self identical with the divine 110 Bibliography Hear Yourself How to find peace in a noisy world Audiobook HarperAudio September 2021 ISBN 978 0063070776 Hear Yourself Inneren Frieden finden in einer lauten Welt Piper 30 Juni 2022 EAN 978 3 492 07102 4 Hear Yourself How to find peace in a noisy world Harper One 30 September 2021 ISBN 978 0 06 307074 5 Apprendre a s ecouter Comment trouver la paix dans la bruit du monde Hrsg POINTS 1 April 2021 ISBN 978 2757886670 Escuchate Encuentra la pazt en un mondo ruidoso Aguilar 13 Februar 2020 ISBN 978 84 03 52166 7 Impara Ad Ascoltari Capire se stressi oltre il rumore del mondo Rizzoli 5 Sep 2020 EAN 9788817146494 Cuando el desierto florece El libro que hace brotar tu sonorisa interior Penguin Random House 31 Juli 2018 ISBN 978 8403516205 Der Papagei der alles wusste und nichts konnte Weisheiten die glucklich machen Gutersloher Verlagshaus 5 Marz 2018 ISBN 978 3579087030 Peace Is Possible Thoughts on happiness success and relationship for a deeper understanding of life Penguin 6 Juni 2019 ISBN 978 0 241 38544 9 Quando il deserto fiorisce Il libro che fara abbociare il tuo sorriso interior Varia 16 Juli 2019 ISBN 978 8817105392 Splitting The Arrow Understanding the Business of Life Hrsg BUNYA LLC 2015 ISBN 978 4907298012 The Greatest Truth Of All CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 2012 ISBN 9781481028875Mighty River Press published a biography of Prem Rawat in 15 November 2007 written by Andrea Cagan Peace Is Possible The Life and Message of Prem Rawat ISBN 9780978869496OrganizationsSee also Bibliography of Prem Rawat and related organizations Rawat inherited the first organization he was associated with Divine Light Mission from his father Moving away from the trappings of Indian culture and religion he later established Elan Vital and Words of Peace International independent of culture beliefs and lifestyles and not bound to the traditions of India The Prem Rawat Foundation TPRF founded in 2001 added more focus to humanitarian efforts Divine Light Mission Main article Divine Light Mission The Divine Light Mission Divya Sandesh Parishad DLM was an organization founded in 1960 by guru Hans Rawat for his following in northern India During the 1970s the DLM gained prominence in the West under the leadership of his fourth and youngest son Prem Rawat Some scholars noted the influence of the Bhagavad Gita and the Sant Mat tradition but the western movement was widely seen as a new religious movement a cult a charismatic religious sect or an alternative religion 111 DLM officials said the movement represented a church rather than a religion 112 Elan Vital and Words of Peace International Main article Elan Vital organization DLM was disbanded when Prem Rawat renounced the trappings of Indian culture and religion making his teachings independent of culture beliefs and lifestyles 113 The DLM in the United States changed its name to Elan Vital in 1983 by filing an entity name change 114 Elan Vital became the name shared by several organizations supporting the work of Rawat Independent Elan Vital organizations in several countries engaged in raising funds organising speaking engagements by Rawat and in some cases broadcast his public addresses Currently Elan Vital is no longer connected to its originally Hindu or Sikh religious background Elan Vital Inc in the U S is registered as a 501 c 3 non profit organization It has been labelled a church in reference to its tax status 115 Its 2005 articles of incorporation described its purpose as performing religious charitable and educational activities The Elan Vital website states that Elan Vital ceased operations in 2010 and has been succeeded by new entities such as Words of Peace International Inc 116 The Prem Rawat Foundation and others In 2001 Prem Rawat founded The Prem Rawat Foundation TPRF 81 a Public Charitable Organization for the production and distribution of materials promoting his message and also for funding worldwide humanitarian efforts TPRF has provided food water and medical help to war torn and impoverished areas 117 The Peace Education Program PEP founded by TPRF is a media based educational program that helps participants explore the possibility of personal peace and to discover personal resources tools for living such as inner strength choice appreciation and hope The program not only successful in some educational institutions had by 2012 also been adopted by 28 prisons in 10 countries including the United States South Africa India Spain Ireland the U K and Australia 118 The voluntary program takes inmates onto a unique route of rehabilitation involving self discovery and hopes of a fulfilled life within or without the prison walls 2 ReceptionMedia From Prem Rawat s first travels in the West he and his followers attracted media attention In an interview in Der Spiegel in 1973 Prem Rawat said I have lost confidence in newspapers I talk with them about this and the next day something completely different is printed 119 In 1973 the Divine Light Mission s 50 member public relations team concluded that Prem Rawat s credibility had been compromised by his youth his physical appearance and the Rolls Royce as well as the Detroit pieing incident and an allegation of smuggling which was never prosecuted The head of the team said that they needed to get the public to look past these factors to judge Prem Rawat s credibility 120 Rawat commented on criticism during an interview on a Taiwan News channel in June 2014 121 So far I m concerned my focus in life is not to appease critics but is to bring the message of peace to people When you ve been doing what I have been doing for 5 decades plus yes you re gonna get critics People said He s going to fade away Well how about fifty two years And I m still doing strong because it is about my conviction And my conviction is peace is possible And I will do everything that I must do because it s important to me that people find that peace in their life 122 Biographer Andrea Cagan described Rawat as a man who loves life and is focused on spreading the message of peace 82 In 2014 independent filmmaker Cynthia Fitzpatrick produced Inside Peace a documentary about several inmates who had participated in TPRF s Peace Education Program while incarcerated at Dominguez State Prison Texas Premiering in 2015 in the United States and the United Kingdom to a positive critical response Inside Peace received several awards PBS aired the film across the United States in 2018 123 124 In 2019 Penguin Random House published Prem Rawat s book Peace Is Possible Thoughts on happiness success and relationships for a deeper understanding of life 125 In 2020 Penguin Random House also released Prem Rawat s book Escuchate the Spanish language edition of Hear Yourself 126 The English version was released by Harper Collins on 14 September 2021 127 Sociologists views leadership type Several scholars referred to Max Weber s classification of authority when describing Rawat as a charismatic leader 4 128 129 J Gordon Melton said Prem Rawat s personal charisma was one of the reasons for the rapid spread of his message among members of the 1960s counterculture 130 Thomas Pilarzyk a sociologist wrote in a 1978 paper that the distribution of power and authority in the DLM was officially based on the charismatic appeal of Maharaj Ji which he described as being somewhat ambiguous and that many followers were not certain about his position in the organizational scheme of the movement or the claim that he was the only true spiritual master 131 By the early 1980s Meredith McGuire a professor of sociology and anthropology saw a process of formalization transition of charismatic to rational management resulting from Rawat s desire to consolidate his power and authority over the movement in the United States 132 Around the same time Paul Schnabel a sociologist described Rawat as a pure example of a charismatic leader He characterized Rawat as materialistic pampered and intellectually unremarkable compared to Osho but no less charismatic 4 Lucy DuPertuis a sociologist and one time follower who assisted James V Downton with his book about the Divine Light Mission described Rawat s role as a Master as emerging from three interrelated phenomena traditional or theological definitions of Satguru adherents first hand experiences of the Master and communal accounts and discussions of the Master among devotees 133 David G Bromley described Prem Rawat and other founders of new religions as being held in awe by their early followers who ascribe extraordinary powers to them that set them apart from other human beings 134 When describing the difficulty of charismatic leaders in proving to be above normal human failings such as not to suffer ill health or indulge in worldly pursuits he used Rawat s marriage as an example 135 Stephen J Hunt described Prem Rawat s major focus as being on stillness peace and contentment within the individual with his Knowledge consisting of the techniques to obtain these 136 According to Hunt in Rawat s case the notion of spiritual growth is not derived as is traditionally the case with other gurus from his personal charisma but from the nature of his teachings and the benefits to the individuals applying them 137 Ron Geaves a professor in various fields of religion and long time adherent of Rawat wrote that Rawat is not a renunciate and that he has made great efforts to assert his humanity and take apart the hagiography that has developed around him 12 According to Geaves Rawat rather than considering himself a charismatic leader deemphasizes the sealing of the master disciple relationship and focuses on correct practice and staying in touch through participation or listening 138 139 Following Estimates of the number of Prem Rawat s adherents have varied widely over time Petersen stated that Rawat claimed 7 million disciples worldwide in 1973 with 60 000 in the US 140 Rudin amp Rudin gave a worldwide following of 6 million in 1974 of which 50 000 were in the US According to these authors the adherents had fallen to 1 2 million for Prem Rawat s personal worldwide following in 1980 with 15 000 in the US 141 Spencer J Palmer and Roger R Keller published a general DLM membership of 1 2 million worldwide with 50 000 in the US in 1990 and 1997 142 James V Downton who studied Prem Rawat s followers for five years in the 70s said these young people had a spiritual experience which deeply affected them and changed the course of their lives It was an experience which moved many to tears of joy for they had found the answer they had been seeking 143 Downton said by 1976 the vast majority of students viewed Rawat as their spiritual teacher guide and inspiration Quoting a student he had studied Downton said a typical view was that the only thing he Rawat wants is to see people living happily and harmoniously together 144 Downton concluded that the students had changed in a positive way more peaceful loving confident and appreciative of life 145 Paul Schnabel referenced professor in the psychology of religion Van der Lans saying that among his Western students Rawat appeared to stimulate an uncritical attitude which gave them an opportunity to project their fantasies of divinity onto his person According to Schnabel the divine nature of the guru is a standard element of Eastern religion but removed from its cultural context and confounded with the Western understanding of God as a father what is lost is the difference between the guru s person and that which the guru symbolizes resulting in what was described as limitless personality worship 146 Stephen Hunt wrote that Western followers do not see themselves as members of a religion but rather as adherents of a system of teachings focused on the goal of enjoying life to the full 6 Former followers became known as ex premies 79 147 148 149 References Geaves Ron 2004 Elan Vital In Christopher Hugh Partridge ed New Religions A Guide New Religious Movements Sects and Alternative Spiritualities Oxford University Press pp 201 202 ISBN 978 0 19 522042 1 a b Shanti Ayadurai Opening The Doors Of Peace In Prison Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine in The Malaysian Times 29 October 2012 a b c d e f g h Melton 1986 p 141 2 a b c d Schnabel 1982 p 99 Rudin amp Rudin 1980 p 65 a b c d e f g Hunt Stephen J Alternative Religions A Sociological Introduction 2003 pp 116 7 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 3410 8 The major focus of Maharaji is on stillness peace and contentment within the individual and his Knowledge consists of the techniques to obtain them Knowledge roughly translated means the happiness of the true self understanding Each individual should seek to comprehend his or her true self In turn this brings a sense of well being joy and harmony as one comes in contact with one s own nature The Knowledge includes four meditation procedures Light Music Nectar and Word The process of reaching the true self within can only be achieved by the individual but with the guidance and help of a teacher Hence the movement seems to embrace aspects of world rejection and world affirmation The tens of thousands of followers in the West do not see themselves as members of a religion but the adherents of a system of teachings that extol the goal of enjoying life to the full a b c d Mangalwadi 1992 pp 135 136 a b Aagaard 1980 Fahlbusch et al 1998 p 861 Geaves 2006b p 64 Fahlbusch et al 1998 p 861 a b c d e Geaves 2006a pp 44 62 Navbharat Times 10 November 1970 Kranenborg 1982 p 64 Downton 1979 p 3 Lewis 1998a p 83 Prem Rawat Glastonbury 1971 YouTube Google LLC 5 April 2007 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 9 September 2021 Ron Geaves 12 December 2019 Prem Rawat and Counterculture Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781350090873 Retrieved 9 September 2021 a b Downton 1979 p 5 amp 7 Derks Frans and Jan M van der Lans 1983 Subgroups in Divine Light Mission Membership A Comment on Downton in the book Of Gods and Men New Religious Movements in the West Macon edited by Eileen Barker GA Mercer University Press 1984 ISBN 0 86554 095 0 pages 303 308 Downton 1979 p 132 Downton 1979 p 4 amp 146 Pretty Far Out Little Dude Henry Allen The Washington Post 14 September 1971 Cameron 1973 a b Moritz 1974 Gifts for a Guru in Stars and Stripes 15 November 1972 a b c Morgan 1973 a b c Galanter 1999 p 22 a b Messer Jeanne Guru Maharaj Ji and the Divine Light Mission in The New Religious Consciousness by Charles Y Glock and Robert N Bellah eds Berkeley University of California Press 1976 ISBN 0 520 03472 4 pp 52 72 EastWest Journal An Expressway over Bliss Mountain by Phil Levy P 29 Downton James V 1979 Sacred journeys the conversion of young Americans to Division Light Mission New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 04198 5 Downton 1979 pp 5 amp 7 a b Kent 2001 a b Moritz 1974 Downton 1979 pp 187 8 Guru Gets Testimonial And Some Pie in Face in The New York Times 8 August 1973 p 43 At NYT website Archived 12 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bartel Dennis November 1983 Who s Who in Gurus Harper s p 55 Guru Wants To Help Sun News Las Cruces New Mexico 22 August 1973 p B2 Jeremy 1974harvnb error no target CITEREFJeremy1974 help The Perfect Master from India has an ulcer AP THE STARS AND STRIPES 4 September 1973 p 6 Levine 1974 Videotape Explorers on the Trail of a Guru by Dick Adler Los Angeles Times 23 February 1974 p B2 Collier 1978 p 176 a b Foss amp Larkin 1978 All Gods Children The Cult Experience Salvation Or Slavery by Carrol Stoner and Jo Anne Parke The New Religions Why Now p 36 Pilarzyk 1978 a b c Downton 1979 ch 12 a b c d Downton 1979 p 192 Downton 1979 p 5 Bromley amp Shupe 1981 p 137 TIME 7 April 1975 Time 7 April 1975 Archived from the original on 26 August 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2014 a b You re a Perfect Master Newsweek 19 November 1973 The guru who minds his mother By MALCOLM N CARTER AP 11 4 73 Stars and Stripes Boy guru weds Calif woman 24 Associated Press Long Beach Calif Independent 22 May 1974 San Francisco Examiner 7 21 73 as quoted in What s Behind the 15 Year Old Guru Maharaj Ji Gail Winder and Carol Horowitz The Realist 12 73 Through a Third Eye Comes The Divine Light By PHIL HASLANGER Of The Capital Times Staff Capital times 2 16 73 Guru 16 marries secretary AP Tues 21 May 1974 Greeley Tribune The Guru s Wife Is Another Devotee Robert P Dalton AP Staff Writer Oakland Tribune 23 May 1974 Downton 1979 p 191 Guru Tries to Take Control of Mission in The Ruston Daily Leader 9 April 1975 MOTHER OUSTS PLAYBOY GURU in Los Angeles Times Wednesday 2 April 1975 PART II p 6A Price 1979 pp 279 96 a b Maharaj Ji Buys 400 000 Home Base in Malibu Area JOHN DART Los Angeles Times 27 November 1974 p B2 a b c d Malibu Guru Maintains Following Despite Rising Mistrust of Cults Mark Foster Los Angeles Times 12 January 1979 p 3 Finke Nikki MALIBU Metamorphosis Is Hollywood s Haven Growing into Just Another Miami Beach in Los Angeles Times 3 September 1989 At L A Times Archives Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine 1 Year Trial OKd for Sect s Helipad in Los Angeles Times 22 May 1981 p F6 At L A Times Archives Archived 11 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Pasternak Judy Maharaji Denied in Bid to Triple Copter Use in Los Angeles Times 7 July 1985 p 1 At L A Times Archives Archived 11 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Downton 1979 p 199 a b c Downton 1979 Bjorkqvist K 1990 World rejection world affirmation and goal displacement some aspects of change in three new religions movements of Hindu origin In N Holm ed Encounter with India studies in neohinduism pp 79 99 Turku Finland Abo Akademi University Press In 1976 Maharaj Ji declared that he felt that the organization had come between his devotees and himself and he disposed of the headquarters altogether Downton 1979 p 196 Downton 1979 p 201 Guru Maharaj Ji becomes a citizen of the U S Rocky Mountain News Wednesday 19 October 1977 Denver Colorado U S A Leeming David Adams Wood Madden Kathryn Marlan Stanton September 2009 Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion p 274 ISBN 9780387718019 a b Bjorkqvist K 1990 World rejection world affirmation and goal displacement some aspects of change in three new religious movements of Hindu origin In N Holm ed Encounter with India studies in neohinduism pp 79 99 Turku Finland Abo Akademi University Press Kranenborg 2002 p 178 a b Chryssides 2001 pp 210 211 Miller 1995 p 474 a b Hinduism Today 1983 Broadcasts Contact Info Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 17 July 2014 a b About Prem Rawat Archived 9 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine at the website of The Prem Rawat Foundation Archived 24 June 2004 at the Wayback Machine a b Andrea Cagan Peace is Possible The Life and Message of Prem Rawat Mighty River Press ISBN 0 9788694 9 4 University of Texas at San Antonio January 2012 Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Weil Pierre 2006 Festival Mundial da Paz Diario do Paz Caderno I in Portuguese UNIPAZ Associacao Campus ilha de Santa Catarina WORDS OF PEACE FOR EUROPE LA BASILICATA PROTAGONISTA NEL PROCESSO DI PACE Agenzia Internazionale Stampa Estero 2 July 2010 Archived from the original on 24 April 2012 Domani a Bruxelles la conferencia Words of Peace for Europe basilicatanet eu Archived from the original on 2 March 2012 Retrieved 3 October 2011 Province of Potenza Newsletter Provincia potenza it 5 October 2010 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Pledge to Peace Ambassador of Peace honoured at Peace Forum RazorTV Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Opening The Doors of Peace in Prison The Malaysian Times www themalaysiantimes com my 29 October 2012 Archived from the original on 11 June 2017 Retrieved 8 May 2018 The Star Online 28 September 2012 Ambassador of Peace Prem Rawat honoured at Peace Forum Archived from the original on 14 April 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2018 via YouTube Dialogo in Campidoglio visita di Prem Rawat ambasciatore di pace RomaDailyNews romadailynews it 19 May 2015 Archived from the original on 23 March 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2018 The Prem Rawat Foundation and the Tutu Foundation UK Partner on Forum Exploring Peace Education Reconciliation Prison Reform and Breaking the Cycle of Crime PRWeb 9 June 2016 Carcere di Potenza innovativo e all avanguardia nel trattare l esecuzione della pena Questi i progetti Potenza News in Italian 16 March 2021 Retrieved 23 May 2021 Peace education programme to be used in the rehabilitation of inmates archived from the original on 21 December 2021 retrieved 9 May 2021 https www bloomsbury com uk prem rawat and counterculture 9781350090873 Prem Rawat gets Glastonbury Council honour for humanitarian service Indian Star 20 June 2022 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Largest audience at a book reading for a single author Noted author Prem Rawat s book launch event enters Guinness World Records for largest gathering Lipner 1994 pp 120 1 Schomer 1987 a b Geaves 2006b p 66 a b Geaves 2007 pp 267 Geaves 2007 p 280 Geaves Ron Globalization charisma innovation and tradition An exploration of the transformations in the organisational vehicles for the transmission of the teachings of Prem Rawat Maharaji 2006 Journal of Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies 2 44 6 Although Rawat does not see himself as part of a tradition or as having to conform to the behavior of any predecessor in my view the best way to place him is to identify him with Vaudeville s definition of the sant Drury Michael The Dictionary of the Esoteric 3000 Entries on the Mystical and Occult Traditions pp 75 6 2002 Sterling Publishing Company ISBN 1 84293 108 3Maharaj Ji teaches meditation upon the life force This meditation focuses on four types of mystical energy known as the experiences of Light Harmony Nectar and the Word These allow the practitioner to develop a deep and spiritual self knowledge Chryssides George D Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements pp 210 1 Scarecrow Press 2001 ISBN 0 8108 4095 2 This Knowledge was self understanding yielding calmness peace and contentment since the innermost self is identical with the divine Knowledge is attained through initiation which provides four techniques that allow the practitioner to go within Three promises thekeys maharaji net Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 16 May 2008 Aldridge Alan Religion in the Contemporary World 2007 p 59 Chryssides George D Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements pp 210 1 Scarecrow Press 2001 ISBN 0 8108 4095 2 Maharaji progressively dissolved the Divine Light Mission closing the ashrams affirming his own status as a master rather than a divine leader and emphasizing that the Knowledge is universal non Indian in nature This Knowledge was self understanding yielding calmness peace and contentment since the innermost self is identical with the divine Knowledge is attained through initiation which provides four techniques that allow the practitioner to go within van Driel amp Richardson 1988 Miami s startled elite wish the guru in short a pleasant stay By Barry Bearak Knight Ridder Service 30 July 1977 INDEPENDENT PRESS TELEGRAM Long Beach CA A 11 ACCORDING to Anctil and mission president Bill Patterson they represent a church rather than a religion Melton Gordon Encyclopedia of American Religions 7th edition Thomson 2003 p 2328 ISBN 0 7876 6384 0 In the early 1980s Maharaj Ji moved to disband the Divine Light Mission and he personally renounced the trappings of Indian culture and religion disbanding the mission he founded Elan Vital an organization to support his future role as teacher Maharaji had made every attempt to abandon the traditional Indian religious trappings in which the techniques originated and to make his presentation acceptable to all the various cultural settings in which followers live He sees his teachings as independent of culture religion beliefs or lifestyles and regularly addresses audiences in places as culturally diverse as India Japan Taiwan the Ivory Coast Slovenia Mauritius and Venezuela as well as North America Europe and the South Pacific Colorado Secretary of State Business Center state co us Archived from the original on 5 April 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2018 GuideStar Amex Organization Report www guidestar org Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2018 www elanvital org Archived from the original on 21 February 2010 Charity report BBB Wise Giving Alliance Archived from the original on 6 May 2007 Retrieved 6 March 2007 Allison Eric 15 December 2015 There s more than one way to run a prison Eric Allison The Guardian Archived from the original on 1 December 2016 Retrieved 20 November 2016 Der Spiegel 8 October 1973 The Guru Who Minds His Mother MALCOLM N CARTER Associated Press THE STARS AND STRIPES 4 November 1973 Page A6 台灣宏觀電視 Taiwan Outlook Archived from the original on 9 November 2014 View Taiwan from OCAC Welcome to Taiwan Macroview TV Archived from the original on 8 November 2014 Retrieved 22 February 2015 from 21 00 on Inside peace website trailer making of press and awards Peace Behind Barbed Wire 26 February 2015 Huffpost 2015 Rawat Prem 2019 Peace Is Possible Thoughts on happiness success and relationships for a deeper understanding of life United Kingdom Penguin Life ISBN 9780241385449 Rawat Prem 2020 Escuchate Spain Penguin Random House ISBN 9788403521919 Hear Yourself HarperCollins Retrieved 29 September 2021 McGuire 2002 ch 5 p 175 DuPertuis 1986 Partridge Christopher H 2004 New religions a guide new religious movements sects and alternative spiritualities Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 522042 0 Pilarzyk Thomas The Origin Development and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion An Application of Sectarianization Theory Review of Religious Research Vol 20 No 1 Autumn 1978 pp 23 43 McGuire Meredith B Religion the Social Context Belmont California Wadsworth Publishing fifth edition 2002 ISBN 0 534 54126 7 Ch 5 The Dynamics of Religious Collectivities section How Religious Collectivities Develop and Change sub section Organizational Transformations p 175 first edition of this book was 1981 ISBN 0 534 00951 4 Dupertuis Lucy How People Recognize Charisma The Case of Darshan in Radhasoami and Divine Light Mission University of Guam Sociological Analysis 1986 47 2 111 124 Bromley David G 2007 Teaching New Religious Movements Aar Teaching Religious Studies Series An American Academy of Religion Book p 156 ISBN 978 0 19 517729 9 Hammond Phillip E Bromley David G 1987 The Future of new religious movements Macon GA Mercer University Press p 36 ISBN 0 86554 238 4 Stephen J Hunt Alternative Religions A Sociological Introduction 2003 pp 116 7 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 3410 8 Hunt Stephen J Alternative Religions A Sociological Introduction 2003 pp 116 7 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 3410 8 Cagan Andrea 2007 Peace is Possible The Life and Message of Prem Rawat Mighty River pp 115 116 ISBN 978 0 978869 49 6 Geaves Ron Globalization charisma innovation and tradition An exploration of the transformations in the organisational vehicles for the transmission of the teachings of Prem Rawat Maharaji 2006 Journal of Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies 2 44 62 Petersen William J Those Curious New Cults in the 80s New Canaan Connecticut Keats Publishing 1982 p 146 as quoted in Adherents com 1 Usurped Rudin amp Rudin 1980 p 63 Spencer J Palmer amp Roger R Keller Religions of the World p 95 1990 edition quoted in Adherents com Usurped entry Divine Light Mission Usurped Downton James V Sacred Journeys The conversion of young Americans to Divine Light Mission 1979 Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 04198 5 Encounters with God Page 156 Downton 1979 p 198 Downton 1979 p 210 Schnabel Tussen stigma en charisma Between stigma and charisma 1982 Ch V p 142 Archived 26 July 2008 at the Wayback MachineThe reference texts by Van der Lans quoted by Schnabel in that chapter Lans Jan van der Religious Experience An Argument for a multidisciplinary approach in Annual Review of the Social Sciences of Religion 1 1977 pp 133 143 Lans Jan van der Volgelingen van de goeroe Hedendaagse religieuze bewegingen in Nederland Ambo Baarn 1981 ISBN 90 263 0521 4 Keim Tony Police block drive in protest against guru Courier Mail Australia 4 September 2002 Blinded by the Light Good Weekend Sydney Australia 31 August 2002 Former Guru on a Different Mission Rocky Mountain News 30 January 1998 SourcesAagaard Johannes 1980 Who Is Who in Guruism Update A Quarterly Journal on New Religious Movements Vol IV no 3 Dialogcentret Archived from the original on 6 December 2008 Retrieved 7 July 2008 Barbour John D 1994 Versions of deconversion autobiography and the loss of faith Charlottesville University Press of Virginia ISBN 978 0 8139 1546 3 Barrett David V 2001 The new believers a survey of sects cults and alternative religions London New York NY Cassell Distributed in the United States by Sterling Pub ISBN 978 0 304 35592 1 Beckford James International Sociological Association 1986 New religious movements and rapid social change London Beverly Hills Calif Paris France Sage Publications Unesco ISBN 978 0 8039 8003 7 Beit Hallahmi Benjamin 1993 The illustrated encyclopedia of active new religions sects and cults New York Rosen Pub Group ISBN 978 0 8239 1505 7 Bjorkqvist K 1990 World rejection world affirmation and goal displacement some aspects of change in three new religions movements of Hindu origin In Holm Nils G 1990 Encounter with India studies in neohinduism Religionsvetenskapliga skrifter nr 20 Abo Abo akademi pp 79 99 ISBN 978 951 649 731 3 Bowker John Ed The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Oxford University Press New York 1997 ISBN 0 19 213965 7 Bromley David G and Anson D Shupe Jr Strange Gods The Great American Cult Scare Beacon Press Boston 1981 ISBN 080 703 256 5 Bromley David New Ecumenical Research Association Unification Theological Seminary Phillip E Hammond 1987 The Future of new religious movements Macon Ga Mercer University Press ISBN 978 0 86554 237 2 Bromley David G 2007 Teaching New Religious Movements Aar Teaching Religious Studies Series An American Academy of Religion Book p 156 ISBN 978 0 19 517729 9 Cagan Andrea 2007 Peace is Possible The Life and Message of Prem Rawat Mighty River ISBN 978 0 9788694 9 6 Cameron Charles 1973 Who is Guru Maharaj Ji New York Bantam Books Carrol Peter N Nothing Happened The Tragedy and Promise of America in the 1970s Holt Rinehart and Winston 1982 ISBN 0 03 058319 5 Chryssides George D 2001 Historical dictionary of new religious movements Historical dictionaries of religions philosophies and movements no 42 Lanham Md Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 4095 9 Clarke Peter B King s College University of London Dept for the History and Philosophy of Religion 1987 The New evangelists recruitment methods amp aims of new religious movements London Ethnographica ISBN 978 0 905788 60 9 Collier Sophia 1978 Soul rush the odyssey of a young woman of the 70s 1st ed New York Morrow ISBN 978 0 688 03276 0 Downton James V 1979 Sacred journeys the conversion of young Americans to Division Light Mission New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 04198 0 DUO staff 2000 Hans Jayanti New Delhi Divine United Organization 24 37 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help DuPertuis Lucy 1986 How People Recognize Charisma The Case of Darshan in Radhasoami and Divine Light Mission Sociological Analysis Oxford University Press 47 2 111 124 doi 10 2307 3711456 ISSN 0038 0210 JSTOR 3711456 Fahlbusch Erwin Geoffrey William Bromiley 1998 Eerdmans encyclopedia of Christianity Grand Rapids Mich Wm B Eerdmans Pub ISBN 978 0 8028 2413 4 Frankiel Sandra S in Lippy Charles H and Williams Peter W Eds Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience p 1521 Charles Scribner s Sons 1988 ISBN 0 684 18863 5 Vol III Galanter Marc 1999 Cults Faith Healing and Coercion New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512369 2 Geaves Ron March 2004 From Divine Light Mission to Elan Vital and Beyond An Exploration of Change and Adaptation Nova Religio 7 3 45 62 doi 10 1525 nr 2004 7 3 45 Geaves Ron 2006a Globalization charisma innovation and tradition An exploration of the transformations in the organisational vehicles for the transmission of the teachings of Prem Rawat Maharaji in Journal of Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies Volume 2 2006 ISBN 978 1 4196 2696 8 pp 44 62 Online version at the Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies Association website PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 June 2008 Retrieved 14 June 2008 Geaves Ron 2006b From Guru Maharaj Ji to Prem Rawat Paradigm Shifts over the Period of 40 Years as a Master In Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael eds 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol 4 Westport CT Greenwood Press pp 63 84 ISBN 0 275 98712 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Geaves Ron From Totapuri to Maharaji Reflections on a Lineage Parampara in Indian Religions Renaissance and Revival ed Anna King London Equinox 2007 Geaves Ron Forget Transmitted Memory The De traditionalised Religion of Prem Rawat in Journal of Contemporary Religion Vol 24 1 2009 Goring Rosemary 1995 The Wordsworth dictionary of beliefs and religions Wordsworth Reference Ware Hertfordshire England Wordsworth ISBN 978 1 85326 354 5 Gray Francine du Plessix 13 December 1973 Blissing Out in Houston New York Review of Books in Dutch Haan Wim De missie van het Goddelijk licht van goeroe Maharaj Ji een subjektieve duiding from the series Religieuze bewegingen in Nederland Feiten en Visies nr 3 autumn 1981 Dutch language ISBN 90 242 2341 5 Available online via Wim Haan s webpages at a website of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Hadden Jeffrey K and Elliot III Eugene M Divine Light Mission Elan Vital in Melton J Gordon Martin Baumann 2002 Religions of the world a comprehensive encyclopedia of beliefs and practices Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 223 3 Hinnells John R 1997 The Penguin dictionary of religions Penguin reference books London England New York N Y U S A Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 051261 8 Hunt Stephen 2003 Alternative religions a sociological introduction Aldershot Hampshire England Burlington VT Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 3409 6 Kahn Ashley George Warren Holly Dahl Shawn eds 1998 Rolling Stone The Seventies Boston Little Brown and Co ISBN 978 0 316 75914 4 Kent Stephen A 2001 From slogans to mantras social protest and religious conversion in the late Vietnam War era Religion and politics Syracuse N Y Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2923 8 in Dutch Kranenborg Reender Dr 1982 Oosterse Geloofsbewegingen in het Westen Eastern faith movements in the West Dutch language ISBN 90 210 4965 1 in Dutch Kranenborg Reender Neohindoeistische bewegingen in Nederland een encyclopedisch overzicht Kampen Kok cop 2002 in Dutch Lammers Jos Het concern van Guru Maharaj ji Vijf jaar zakenman in dienst van de verlichting in Haagse Post 68 7 1981 02 14 pp 48 53 Lans Jan van der and Dr Frans Derks Premies Versus Sannyasins in Update A Quarterly Journal on New Religious Movements X 2 June 1986 in Dutch Lans Jan van der Dr Volgelingen van de goeroe Hedendaagse religieuze bewegingen in Nederland Dutch language Ambo Baarn 1981 ISBN 90 263 0521 4 Lee Raymond Susan Ellen Ackerman 1997 Sacred tensions modernity and religious transformation in Malaysia Columbia S C University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 167 0 Leech Kenneth 2001 Soul friend spiritual direction in the modern world Harrisburg PA Morehouse Pub ISBN 978 0 8192 1888 9 Levine Richard 14 March 1974 When The Lord of All The Universe Played Houston Many are called but few show up Rolling Stone pp 36 50 Also in Kahn Ashley George Warren Holly Dahl Shawn eds 1998 Rolling Stone The Seventies Boston Little Brown and Co ISBN 978 0 316 75914 4 Levine Saul V in Galanter Marc 1989 Cults and New Religious Movements A Report of the American Psychiatric Association American Psychiatric Pub Inc ISBN 0 89042 212 5 Lewis James NetLibrary Inc 1998a Cults in America a reference handbook Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 585 05843 6 Lewis James R 1998b The encyclopedia of cults sects and new religions Amherst N Y Prometheus Books ISBN 978 1 57392 222 7 Lipner Julius J 1994 Hindus their religious beliefs and practices Library of religious beliefs and practices London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 05181 1 Lippy Charles H 2002 Pluralism comes of age American religious culture in the twentieth century Armonk N Y M E Sharpe ISBN 978 0 7656 0151 3 MacDougall Curtis Daniel 1983 Superstition and the press Buffalo N Y Prometheus Books ISBN 978 0 87975 211 8 Macgregor John Blinded by the Light in Good Weekend Sydney Australia 31 August 2002 Mangalwadi Vishal 1992 The world of gurus Chicago Ill Cornerstone ISBN 978 0 940895 03 4 McGuire Meredith B 2002 Religion the social context Belmont CA Wadsworth Thomson Learning ISBN 978 0 534 54126 2 McKean Lise Divine Enterprise Gurus and the Hindu Nationalist Movement University of Chicago Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 226 56009 0 Melton J Gordon Robert L Moore 1982 The cult experience responding to the new religious pluralism New York Pilgrim Press ISBN 978 0 8298 0619 9 Melton J Gordon 1986 The encyclopedic handbook of cults in America Garland reference library of social science v 213 New York Garland Pub ISBN 978 0 8240 9036 4 Melton J Gordon 2003 Encyclopedia of American religions Detroit Gale ISBN 978 0 7876 6384 1 Metz Cade 6 February 2008 Wikipedia ruled by Lord of the Universe The Register Retrieved 14 October 2008 Miller Timothy 1995 America s alternative religions Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2397 4 Morgan Ted 9 December 1973 Oz in the Astrodome The guru enthroned The New York Times Retrieved 14 October 2008 Moritz Charles ed 1974 Current Biography Yearbook 1974 New York H W Wilson Company ISBN 9780824205515 Palmer Spencer J and Keller R R Religions of the World A Latter day Saint View Brigham Young University 1997 ISBN 0 8425 2350 2 Petersen William J December 1982 Those Curious New Cults in the 80 s Revised ed Keats Pub p 307 ISBN 0 87983 317 3 Pilarzyk Thomas 1978 The Origin Development and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion An Application of Sectarianization Theory Review of Religious Research Religious Research Association Inc 20 1 23 43 doi 10 2307 3509939 ISSN 0034 673X JSTOR 3509939 Price Maeve 1979 The Divine Light Mission as a social organization Sociological Review 27 2 279 296 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954X 1979 tb00335 x S2CID 144659402 Pryor William The Survival of the Coolest A Darwin s Death Defying Journey into the Interior of Addiction 2004 Clear Press ISBN 1 904555 13 6 Rawat Prem and Wolf Burt Inner Journey A spirited conversation about self discovery DVD ISBN 0 9740627 0 7 Rawat Prem Maharaji at Griffith University 2004 ISBN 0 9740627 2 3 in Dutch Schnabel Paul Tussen stigma en charisma nieuwe religieuze bewegingen en geestelijke volksgezondheid Between stigma and charisma new religious movements and mental health Erasmus University Rotterdam Faculty of Medicine PhD thesis 1982 Deventer Van Loghum Slaterus ISBN 90 6001 746 3 Available online at DBNL Schomer Karine W H McLeod 1987 The Sants studies in a devotional tradition of India 1st ed Berkeley Calif Delhi Berkeley Religious Studies Series Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 0 961220 80 8 Siebers Tobin 1993 Religion and the authority of the past Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 10489 5 The Prem Rawat Foundation presents Maharaji at Sanders Theatre Harvard University 2005 ISBN 0 9740627 3 1 United States Kirschner Associates Institute for the Study of American Religion 2001 Religious requirements and practices of certain selected groups a handbook for chaplains Honolulu HI University Press of the Pacific for U S Dept of Defense Dept of the Army Office of the Chief of Chaplains ISBN 978 0 89875 607 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Whatever Happened to Guru Maharaj Ji Once Heralded as the Avatar of the Age the Leader of the Divine Light Mission is Hard to Find These Days Hinduism Today Himalayan Academy October 1983 ISSN 0896 0801 Archived from the original on 23 June 2010 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Prem Rawat Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prem Rawat Prem Rawat s personal website The Prem Rawat Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prem Rawat amp oldid 1163455957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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