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Adi Da

Adi Da Samraj, born Franklin Albert Jones (November 3, 1939 – November 27, 2008)[1] was an American-born spiritual teacher, writer and artist.[3] He was the founder of a new religious movement known as Adidam.

Adi Da Samraj
Adi Da Samraj in 2008
Born
Franklin Albert Jones

(1939-11-03)November 3, 1939
DiedNovember 27, 2008(2008-11-27) (aged 69)[1][2]
Other namesBubba Free John, Da Free John, Da Love-Ananda, Da Avabhasa, Adi Da Love-Ananda Samraj
Alma materColumbia University
Stanford University
Occupation(s)Spiritual teacher, writer, and artist
Known forFounder of Adidam
ChildrenFour, including Shawnee Free Jones

Adi Da initially became known in the spiritual counterculture of the 1970s for his books and public talks and for the activities of his religious community. He authored more than 75 books, including those published posthumously, with key works including an autobiography, The Knee Of Listening, spiritual works such as The Aletheon and The Dawn Horse Testament, and social philosophy such as Not-Two Is Peace.[2]

Adi Da's teaching is closely related to the Indian tradition of nondualism.[4]: 197  He taught that the 'ego'—the presumption of a separate self—is an illusion, and that all efforts to "attain" enlightenment or unity with the divine from that point-of-view are necessarily futile.[5] Reality or Truth, he said, is "always already the case":[4]: 198  it cannot be found through any form of seeking, it can only be "realized" through transcendence of the illusions of separate self in the devotional relationship to the already-realized being.[6] Distinguishing his teaching from other religious traditions, Adi Da declared that he was a uniquely historic avatar and that the practice of devotional recognition-response to him, in conjunction with most fundamental self-understanding, was the sole means of awakening to seventh stage spiritual enlightenment for others.[7]: 99  Chögyam Trungpa reportedly remarked that "[i]t is tremendously difficult to begin a new tradition" of spirituality, as Adi Da had done.[8]

Adi Da founded a publishing house, the Dawn Horse Press, to print his books.[9] He was praised by authorities in spirituality, philosophy, sociology, literature, and art,[8][10][11][12] but was also criticized for what were perceived as his isolation[13][14] and controversial behavior.[15][16] In 1985, former followers made allegations of misconduct:[17][18] two lawsuits were filed, to which Adidam responded with threats of counter-litigation.[19] The principal lawsuit was dismissed and the other was settled out of court.

In his later years, Adi Da focused on creating works of art intended to enable viewers to enter into a "space" beyond limited "points of view". He was invited to the 2007 Venice Biennale to participate through an official collateral exhibition, and was later invited to exhibit his work in Florence, Italy, in the 15th century Cenacolo di Ognissanti and the Bargello museum.[20][21] His work was also shown in New York, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, Miami, and London.

Biography

Youth and formal education (1939–1964)

 
Adi Da as an infant, 1940

Born in Queens, New York and raised on Long Island,[22] his father was a salesman and his mother a housewife. Adi Da claimed in his autobiography, The Knee Of Listening, that he "was born in a state of perfect freedom and awareness of ultimate reality", which he called the "Bright", and that he "sacrificed that reality at the age of two, so that he could completely identify with the limitations and mortality of suffering humanity" in order to discover ways to help others "awaken to the unlimited and deathless happiness of the Heart".[23] A sister, Joanne, was born when he was eight years old. He served as an acolyte in the Lutheran church during his adolescence and aspired to be a minister, but after leaving for college in the autumn of 1957,[24] expressed doubts about the religion to his Lutheran pastor. Adi Da attended Columbia University where he graduated in 1961 with a bachelor's degree in philosophy. He went on to complete a master's degree in English literature at Stanford University in 1963, under the guidance of novelist and historian Wallace Stegner.[24][7]: 86–88 [25]: 80 [2] His master's thesis was "a study of core issues in modernism, focused on Gertrude Stein and the leading painters of the same period".[26]

During and after his postgraduate studies, Adi Da engaged in an experiment of exhaustive writing, a process in which he wrote continuously for eight or more hours daily, as a kind of "yoga" where every movement of conscious awareness, all experiences, internal or external, were monitored and recorded. In this exercise, he felt that he discovered a structure or "myth" that governed all human conscious awareness, a "schism in Reality" that was the "logic (or process) of separation itself, of enclosure and immunity, the source of all presumed self-identity".[27]: 94  He understood this to be the same logic hidden in the ancient Greek myth of Narcissus, the adored child of the gods, who was condemned to the contemplation of his own image and suffered the fate of eternal separateness. He concluded that the "death of Narcissus" was required to fulfill what he felt was the guiding purpose of his life, which was to awaken to the "Spiritually 'Bright' Condition of Consciousness Itself" that was prior to Narcissus, and communicate this awakening to others.[27]: 94 

In the context of this exploration of consciousness in 1963, Adi Da experimented with various hallucinogenic and other drugs.[28][29] For 6 weeks he was a paid test subject in drug trials of mescaline, LSD, and psilocybin conducted at a Veterans Administration hospital in California.[30] He wrote later that he found these experiences "self-validating" in that they mimicked ecstatic states of consciousness from his childhood, but problematic as they often resulted in paranoia, anxiety, or disassociation.[31][32][33] While living with the support of his girlfriend, Nina Davis, in the hills of Palo Alto,[34] he continued to write, meditated informally, and studied books by C.G. Jung, H.P. Blavatsky, and Edgar Cayce, in order to make sense of his experiences.[35][36]

Spiritual exploration (1964–1970)

In June 1964, Adi Da responded to an intuitive impulse to leave California in search of a spiritual teacher in New York City.[37] Settling in Greenwich Village, he became a student of Albert Rudolph, also known as "Rudi", a dealer in Asian art who had been a disciple of the Indian guru Bhagavan Nityananda. When Nityananda died in 1961, Rudi became a student of Siddha Yoga's founder Swami Muktananda, who gave him the name "Swami Rudrananda". Having studied a number of spiritual traditions, including "The Work" of G.I. Gurdjieff and Subud, Rudi taught an eclectic blend of techniques he called "kundalini yoga"[38][39] (although it was not related to the Indian tradition by that name).[40]: 88 [15]: 81 

Feeling that Adi Da needed better grounding, Rudi insisted that he marry Nina, find steady employment, improve his physical health, end his drug use, and begin preparatory studies to enter the seminary.[25]: 81 [41] As a student at Philadelphia's Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1967, Adi Da described undergoing a terrifying breakdown. Taken to a hospital emergency room, a psychiatrist diagnosed it as an anxiety attack.[42] It was the first of a number of such episodes, each followed by what he described as profound awakenings or insights.[25]: 81 [43] He described the episodes as a kind of "death" or release from identity with the presumed separate persona, after which there was only "an Infinite Bliss of Being, an untouched, unborn Sublimity—without separation, without individuation. There was only Reality Itself … the unqualified living condition of the totality of conditionally manifested existence". A comparable pre-awakening process had been described by the renowned Indian sage Ramana Maharshi.[44] Feeling none of his Lutheran professors understood this experience, Adi Da left and briefly attended St. Vladimir's Russian Orthodox Seminary in Tuckahoe, New York.[45] Disillusioned, he moved back to New York City and found employment with Pan American Airlines, hoping this might help him fulfill his desire to visit Swami Muktananda's ashram in India.

Swami Muktananda, a disciple of Bhagavan Nityananda, was a well-known guru who had brought his tradition of Kashmir Shaivism to the West, establishing meditation centers around the world. Adi Da received formal permission to visit the ashram for four days in April 1968. Muktananda encouraged him to end his studies with Rudi and study with himself directly.[7]: 85  In his autobiography, Adi Da related how he was granted shaktipat initiation, the awakening of the Kundalini Shakti that is said to reside at the base of the spine, which deepens the practice of Siddha Yoga meditation. Adi Da described experiencing an awakening to the Witness consciousness, beyond identification with the point of view of bodily consciousness. He began to study formally with Swami Muktananda.[46]

After returning to New York, Adi Da and Nina became members and then employees of the Church of Scientology,[47] leaving after a little more than a year of involvement. Adi Da returned to India for a month-long visit in early 1969, during which he received a handwritten (and formally translated) letter from Swami Muktananda, granting him the spiritual names Dhyanananda and Love-Ananda,[27]: 221–227  and authorizing him to initiate others into Siddha Yoga.[48][15]: 81–82  In May 1970, Adi Da, Nina, and a friend named Pat Morley traveled to India for what they believed would be an indefinite period living at Swami Muktananda's ashram. However, Adi Da was disappointed by his experience there, especially by the institutionalization of the ashram and the large numbers of westerners who had arrived since his previous visit.[27]: 122, 264–267  Three weeks after arriving, he visited the burial place of Bhagavan Nityananda and, by his account, received an immense transmission of the Shakti-Force. According to his autobiography, he began—to his great surprise—to see visions of the Virgin Mary (which he interpreted as a personification of the divine feminine power, or shakti). The vision of Mary directed him to make a pilgrimage to Christian holy sites. After embarking on a two week pilgrimage to holy places in Europe and the Middle East, he, Nina and Pat returned to New York. In August 1970, they moved to Los Angeles.[24][15]: 82 [27]: 131 

Becoming a spiritual teacher (1970–1973)

 
Adi Da in Los Angeles, 1973

Adi Da wrote in his autobiography that in September 1970, while sitting in the Vedanta Society Temple in Hollywood,[15]: 82  he awakened fully into the state of perfect spiritual enlightenment that he called "The Bright".[15]: 82 [40]: 91 [49] He wrote that although he had been born with full awareness of "the Bright", this awareness became obscured in childhood, and his subsequent spiritual journey had been a quest to recapture it, and share it with others.[50][51]: 146–147  The autobiography, entitled The Knee Of Listening, was published in 1972. It included a foreword by the well-known spiritual philosopher Alan Watts,[52] who on studying Adi Da's teachings had reportedly said, "It looks like we have an avatar here. I've been waiting for such a one all my life".[53] In the foreword, he wrote: "It is obvious, from all sorts of subtle details, that he knows what IT's all about… a rare being".

In The Knee Of Listening and subsequent books, Adi Da spoke of "Consciousness Itself" as the ultimate nature of Reality.[54] This Consciousness is "Transcendent and Radiant", "the Source-Condition of everything that is", "the uncaused immortal Self", "a Conscious Light utterly beyond the limited perspective of any ego, any religion, or any culture."[55] Everything in the physical universe, he claimed, is a modification of this Conscious Light. Expressed in more conventional language, Adi Da's realization was that there is only God, and that everything arises within that One.[55] In later years this was summed up in the three "great sayings" of Adidam:

There is no ultimate "difference" between you and the Divine.

There is only the Divine.

Everything that exists is a "modification" of the One Divine Reality.[4]: 200 

When Swami Muktananda stopped in California on a worldwide tour in October 1970, Adi Da visited him and related his experience the previous month of "The Bright". He felt that the swami did not understand or properly acknowledge the full importance of his realization of "Consciousness Itself", prior to visions and yogic phenomena and indeed all experiences in the context of the body-mind. During the visit Adi Da reconciled with Rudi.[27]: 101–102 

In 1972, Adi Da opened Ashram Books (later Dawn Horse Books), a spiritual center and bookshop in Los Angeles. He began with a "simple and traditional" teaching method, sitting formally with a small group in the meditation hall and simply transmitting his state of "perfect Happiness" to them. He began giving discourses, soon attracting a small following due in part to his charismatic speaking style.[56][57] He taught in a traditional Indian style, speaking from a raised dais surrounded by flowers and oriental carpets, with listeners seated on the floor. He incorporated many elements of the guru-devotee relationship associated with the Kashmir Shaivite and Advaita Vedanta schools of Hinduism, but also expressed original insights and opinions about both spirituality and secular culture.[58][40]: 88–89  As the gathering grew, he introduced disciplines related to money, food, sex, and community living.[23] He was one of the first westerners to become well known as a teacher of meditation and eastern esoteric traditions at a time when these were of growing interest.[40]: 88  Some early participants stated that Adi Da demonstrated an ability to produce alterations in their consciousness, likening the effect to shaktipat of Indian yoga traditions.[59] In 1972, he began to teach "radical understanding", described as "a combination of discriminative self-observation and guru-devotion".[23] With the number of followers increasing, a formal religious community—"The Dawn Horse Communion"—was established.

In 1973, Adi Da traveled to India to meet a final time with Swami Muktananda. They disagreed on a series of questions which Adi Da had prepared, creating a rupture in their relationship. They later criticized each other's approach to spiritual matters.[60] Adi Da nevertheless stated that he continued to appreciate and respect his former guru, and to express his "love and gratitude for the incomparable service" Muktananda had performed for him.[27]: ch. 13 [40]: 90–91 [61]

 
The Mountain of Attention Sanctuary in Lake County, California

Upon returning to Los Angeles, Adi Da (then Franklin Jones) assumed the name "Bubba Free John", based on a nickname meaning "friend" combined with a rendering of "Franklin Jones". He and Nina divorced, although she remained a follower.[15]: 87, 94  In January 1974, Adi Da told his followers that he was "the divine lord in human form".[62] Later that year, the church obtained an aging hot springs resort in Lake County, California, renaming it "Persimmon" (it is now known as "The Mountain of Attention"). Adi Da and a group of selected followers moved there and experimented in communal living.[24][58][15]: 83  Most followers relocated from Los Angeles to San Francisco, where Dawn Horse Books also moved.

"Crazy Wisdom" (1973–1983)

 
Adi Da during the Garbage and the Goddess period, 1974

In 1973, Adi Da began to use more unconventional means of instruction, which he called "crazy wisdom", comparing it to a tradition of yogic adepts who employed seemingly un-spiritual methods to awaken disciples.[63] Some followers reported having profound metaphysical experiences in Adi Da's presence, attributing these phenomena to his spiritual power.[64] Others present remained skeptical, witnessing nothing supernatural.[16]

Adi Da initiated a series of teachings and activities that came to be known as the "Garbage and the Goddess" period, based on the title of his fourth book, Garbage and the Goddess: The Last Miracles and Final Spiritual Instructions of Bubba Free John. The text recounts a four-to-five-month "teaching demonstration" by Adi Da, in which he initiated and freely participated in a cycle of activities of a "celebratory" wild and ecstatic nature – an overturning of previous restrictions and conventional behaviours that was often accompanied by spontaneous displays of "spiritual power".[65] Many of his devotees spoke of experiencing visionary states of consciousness, kundalini phenomena, blissful states and so forth. However, Adi Da constantly reiterated that such experiences were only manifestations of the Goddess and her phenomenal world: they were not spiritually auspicious and had no bearing on the realization of Consciousness itself.[4] The book's central message, that true spiritual life has nothing to do with extraordinary experiences (hence the "garbage" reference in the title), did not stop people from showing up, looking for both such experiences and the extravagant parties and activities portrayed in the book. This was not the message Adi Da wanted to send. Despite the book's commercial success, the community ultimately chose to withdraw it from the market.[4][66]

Over a period of years, Adi Da entered into what he called "emotional-sexual reality consideration" with his formal devotees. It included "sexual theater", a form of psychodrama that sometimes involved the switching of partners, the making of pornographic movies, orgies and other intensified sexual practices, with the aim of revealing and releasing emotional and sexual neuroses.[67][68] Adi Da spoke of the cultish and contractual nature of conventional relationships, particularly marriage, as being a form of reinforcement of the ego-personality and an obstacle to spiritual life. Many couples were initially encouraged to switch partners and experiment sexually.[69][15]: 84 [70] Drug and alcohol use were sometimes encouraged, and earlier proscriptions against meat and "junk food" were no longer adhered to for periods of time.[15]: 90  Adi Da said that the emotional-sexual consideration was part of a radical overturning of conventional moral values and social contracts,[15]: 84–86, 89 [71] obliging devotees to confront their habitual patterns and emotional attachments. According to his teaching, little of spiritual value can be accomplished until the "emotional-sexual nature of the human being" is understood, incorporated into spiritual practice, and transcended.[72] Human sexuality, he said, always deeply encodes social practices, identity formation, and the most secret and important truths about individuals. He said that his present work in this area could not have been as effective without the earlier cultural and philosophical groundwork laid by Freud's depth psychoanalysis.[4]

After years of consideration about sexuality with students, Adi Da summarized his instruction about sexuality and spiritual practice. Contrary to various tantric practices aimed at the transformation of sexual energy into spiritual energy, Adi Da maintains that sex, like everything to do with the body, is "not causative" relative to spirituality; at most, sex and a disciplined practice of emotional-sexual intimacy, can be made compatible with the spiritual process. The spiritual process, he emphasized, involves transcendence of identification with the body-mind altogether.[73]

In 1979, Adi Da changed his name from "Bubba Free John" to "Da Free John" ("Da" being a Sanskrit syllable meaning "the One Who Gives"),[23] signifying to his devotees the divine nature of his revelation as guru. He also established a second ashram in Hawaii, now called Da Love-Ananda Mahal. Over the next decade, Adi Da changed his name several times, saying it reflected differences or changes in the nature of his message and relationship to followers. Subsequent names included Da Love-Ananda, Dau Loloma, Da Kalki, Hridaya-Samartha Sat-Guru Da, Santosha Da, Da Avadhoota, Da Avabhasa, and from 1994, Adi Da Love-Ananda Samraj, or Adi Da.[24][40]: 85, 105 [74]

"Divine Emergence" and final years (1983–2008)

 
Adi Da at The Mountain of Attention Sanctuary, 1986

Even before Adi Da opened the ashram bookstore in Los Angeles in 1972, he stated that people need holy places where Spiritual Force is alive. In 1983, having established such "empowered" places in Northern California and Hawaii, Adi Da moved with a group of about 40 followers to the Fijian island of Naitauba, purchased by a wealthy follower from the actor Raymond Burr.[75][76] His intention was to establish a "set-apart" hermitage for his spiritual work in the world.[76] Adi Da Samraj became a citizen of Fiji in 1993. It was his primary residence until the end of his life.[1]

On Naitauba Island on January 11, 1986, while expressing deep distress at what he felt was the futility of his work, Adi Da described the feeling of the life-force leaving his body, before collapsing, going into convulsions and losing consciousness. Doctors found his vital signs to be present, although his breathing was almost imperceptible. They eventually succeeded in resuscitating him. He later described the episode as a "literal death experience" with a special significance for his teaching work. His reassociation with the body was accompanied, he said, by a profound impulse of love and compassion for suffering beings. This impulse initiated a complete descent of the "Bright" into his human body, so that the divine became incarnated in human form in an unprecedented manner. The event became known in the Communion as his "Divine Emergence".[77]

After this event, Adi Da expressed an impulse to enable people everywhere to meditate on his image or body in order to "participate in his enlightened state".[78] He began a period of intensive fasting, before leaving Fiji for California. At The Mountain Of Attention Sanctuary he sat silently with over a thousand people, read from his book The Lion Sutra, and gave discourses calling on devotees to embrace the inherently renunciate, ego-transcending nature of the way he had given. He later traveled to New York City, London, Paris and Amsterdam, silently giving his blessing to all who came visibly into his sphere.[79]

Following the death of spiritual teacher Frederick Lenz (Zen Master Rama) in 1998, some followers of Lenz joined Adidam. Adi Da actively supported Lenz's followers joining his organization; according to religious studies professor Eugene V. Gallagher, Adi Da claimed to have been Swami Vivekananda in a past life, with Lenz having been Vivekenanda's disciple Rama Tirtha.[80]

In the late 1990s Adi Da often spoke of dark forces that were becoming increasingly powerful in the world, telling devotees of his constant engagement with these forces and his unarmoured receptivity to the pain and misery of the countless people suffering. These processes, he said, had a devastating effect on his body, and in April 2000, while traveling in Northern California under the care of devotees, he became almost completely physically incapacitated. On April 12, at Lopez Island, in the presence of a number of devotees, he again experienced a process of disassociation from the physical resembling death. In this event, he said, he became fully established as the "Bright" Itself, in a living demonstration of what he calls "Divine Translation". Only the knowledge that his work in human form had not yet been completed, he said, maintained his connection to the world and drew him back into embodiment. Adidam later acquired the property on Lopez Island where this had taken place, renaming it "Ruchira Dham Hermitage": the event itself, which Adi Da discusses in detail in part 19 of The Aletheon, is referred to as "The Ruchira Dham Event".[81] He wrote that it marked the definitive end of his "active" teaching work: from now on he would simply transmit his state, requiring devotees to become responsible for their reception of that. He nonetheless continued to write books, make art, and give discourses, but with an increased emphasis on what he called "silent Darshan".[40]: 96 

In the last years of his life, Adi Da began to exhibit his digital art and photography.[40]: 96  Followers reported that he died of cardiac arrest on November 27, 2008, at his home in Fiji, while working on his art.[1][82]

Adi Da had four children: three biological daughters with three different women, and one adopted daughter.[83]

Teachings

Adi Da's philosophical teachings can be summarized as:

  • The true nature of Reality is indivisible Conscious Light.
  • The sense of separate self is an illusion, caused by our own activity of "self-contraction".
  • Transcending the illusion of an apparently separate self reveals our true identity as Conscious Light, or Reality Itself.

Adi Da maintained that human beings are always demanding an explanation for the existence of the world or the bodily "self". There is a presumption that the world or the self is first. People therefore seek to account for these first, and then seek to understand the Divine on that basis. To the dualistic "point of view", these presumptions are the fundamentally necessary starting point to all philosophical or metaphysical considerations.[84]

Conversely, Adi Da affirmed that the proper beginning of philosophy (or what he called the fundamental principle of "Perfect Philosophy") is the intrinsic apprehension of the egoless, indivisible, non-separate, and acausal nature of Reality or Conscious Light. When this prior Reality is understood, he said, the need to account for the world or the body or the self disappears: they are recognized as dualistic presumptions, not primary realities from which Truth can then be found.[84]

"Self-contraction"

According to Adi Da's teaching, the human being's apparent inability to live as Conscious Light is a result of the illusion of separate self. The ego—the "I" with whom each individual identifies—is not an entity, or even an idea or a concept; it is a "chronic and total psycho-physical Activity of self-contraction", locatable in feeling as a subtle but constant anxiety or stress, and recognizable in all manifestations of reactive emotion.[85] It is a mistaken identification with the limitations of the body-mind mechanism, necessarily implying differentiation of 'self' from 'other' beings or 'selves'. Self-contraction is an unnecessary and unnatural limit placed on Energy, or the Inherent Radiance of Transcendental Being, which is always already perfectly free. The act creates a consciousness apparently cut off from its primordial unity, producing the self-obsession and incessant seeking symbolised in the myth of Narcissus.[86] An individual biography is generated from the movement of "desire" – the constant effort to "create a connection, a flow of force, between the contracted identity and everything from which it has differentiated itself."[87] Efforts to reunite with the divine from the position of the separate self are necessarily futile because this self itself is a fundamental illusion. The already present divine, according to Adi Da, can only be realized through releasing the contraction and transcending the illusion of separate self altogether. Such transcendence, he maintained, is made possible through satsang – the devotional relationship to the Spiritual Master or Satguru who transmits and communicates the Truth.[88][89][85]

"Seventh stage realization"

Adi Da developed a schema called "the seven stages of life" which he says is a precise "mapping" of the potential developmental course of human spiritual experience as it unfolds through the gross, subtle, and causal dimensions of the being. "Gross" means made of material elements and refers to the physical body. The subtle dimension, which is senior to and which pervades the gross dimension, consists of the etheric (or personal life-energy), and includes the lower mental functions (conscious mind, subconscious mind, and unconscious mind) and higher mental functions (discriminative mind and will). The causal dimension is senior to both the subtle and the gross dimensions. It is the root of attention, or the essence of identity with the separate self or ego-"I".[27]: 732, 776–777 [90]

  • First Stage—"individuation/physical development"
  • Second Stage—"socialization"
  • Third Stage—"integration/mental development"
  • Fourth Stage—"spiritualization/Divine Communion"
  • Fifth Stage—"spiritual ascent"
  • Sixth Stage—"abiding in consciousness"
  • Seventh Stage—"Divine Enlightenment: awakening from all egoic limitations"

Adi Da categorized the fourth, fifth, and sixth stages of life as the highest respective stages of human development. He characterized those who have reached these stages as "saints", "yogis", and "sages", including other religious figures such as Gautama Buddha and Jesus Christ.[91]

In Adi Da's schema, the sixth stage or horizontal process is "the exclusion of all awareness of the 'outside' world (in both its gross and subtle dimensions), by 'secluding' oneself within the heart—in order to rest in the Divine Self", or Consciousness Itself.[91]: 733–735  As this is "achieved by conditional means—the conditional effort of exclusion", it is non-permanent.[91]: 733–735  Relative to this spectrum, Adi Da stated that while some "yogis, saints, and sages" had occasionally indicated some awareness of a "seventh stage", only he as a unique avatar had ever been born fully invested with the capability to fully embody it; furthermore, as the first "Seventh Stage Adept" only he would ever need to (or be capable of) doing so.[92] He stated that the seventh stage has nothing to do with development and does not come after the sixth stage in a sequential manner. Seventh stage Realization is a permanent, natural state of "open-eyed ecstasy", for which Adi Da employed the Sanskrit term Sahaj Samadhi or Seventh Stage Sahaja Nirvikalpa Samadhi.[93][91]: 736  Adi Da claimed to be in the seventh stage of life, most perfectly realized as Conscious Light Itself, which is absolutely unconditional and is therefore permanent.[91]: 736 

Adi Da stated that since he solely embodied seventh stage realization, the practice of devotional recognition-response to him, in conjunction with fundamental self-understanding, would henceforth be the exclusive means for others to most perfectly transcend "self-contraction", thereby allowing them to "participate in his enlightened state" (i.e. awaken to the seventh stage Realization).[94][95][96][97]

Adidam

 
Dome Temple at Da Love-Ananda Mahal in Kauai, Hawaii
 
Temple at Adi Da Samrajashram in Naitauba, Fiji

Adidam refers to both the organization of Adi Da's devotees and the religion he taught. The organization, or church, founded initially in 1972, went by many earlier names, including the Dawn Horse Communion, the Free Communion Church, the Laughing Man Institute, the Crazy Wisdom Fellowship, the Way of Divine Ignorance, and the Johannine Daist Communion.[98] Adi Da's devotees recognize him to be a spiritual master who is the Avataric incarnation of the "Bright", or Conscious Light itself.

Many aspects of Adidam presuppose an Indian view of divinity, accepting the concepts of karma, reincarnation, chakras, etc. It employs many Sanskrit terms and concepts. God, or the divine, is seen as a principle and energy, a consciousness that predates creation but is not a willful creator itself.[40]: 98–99 

Adidam was also suggested to have increasingly resembled the Hindu tradition of bhakti yoga.[24][99][100] The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements noted that "[w]hile acknowledging his debts to both Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism, Adi Da asserted the originality of his own religious teaching".[8] The practice of Adidam is defined by its emphasis on a devotional relationship to Adi Da, whom followers see as an enlightened source of transcendental spiritual transmission capable of awakening others to seventh stage divine realization.[40]: 93  Adi Da's followers often refer to him simply as "Beloved".[24] While devotion to Adi Da and the study of his teachings are the primary features of Adidam, other specified practices are also prescribed, including the study of other religious texts, physical exercises, regulation of sexuality, and a raw vegan diet.[24][101] In his book The Aletheon, Adi Da described the mysterious appearance of the Avatar from his childhood in this way: "Something in the super-physics of the universe makes it possible for the divine conscious light to avatarically incarnate as an apparent human individual, for the purpose of bringing others into the sphere of divinely enlightened existence".[102]

Adi Da said that after his death there would not be any further teachings or "revelations", and that his message was complete.[40]: 97  His artwork, writings, and the religious hermitages and sanctuaries "empowered" by his presence are to remain as expressions of his teaching and being. He was emphatic that no individual assert themselves as his representative or heir.[103][104]

While the primary spiritual center of the church is Naitauba Island, Fiji, there are two officially designated ashrams, or "sanctuaries", belonging to Adidam in the United States, with another in Europe, and another in New Zealand. Followers of Adidam have been ambitious and prolific in their dissemination of Adi Da's books and teachings; however, the church is estimated to have remained more or less constant at approximately 1,000 members worldwide since 1974, with a high rate of turnover among membership.[40]: 86, 105 [105]

Works

 
Orpheus and Eurydice (diptych), 2008 Eurydice One: The Illusory Fall of the Bicycle into The Sub-Atomic Parallel Worlds of Primary Color and Point of View Part Three: The Abstract Narrative in Geome and Linead (Second Stage) – L 4 (from Linead One) 2007, 2009 – Lacquer on aluminum, 96 x 198 x 5 inches.

Adi Da produced a variety of literary and creative works, primarily the large number of books that he wrote. The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements wrote that "[o]n his passing Adi Da Samraj's personal charisma was collapsed into the charisma of the sacred books, and the art and the theatrical works he left behind".[8]

Books

 
Cover of the 2007 edition of The Knee Of Listening

Adi Da authored more than 75 books, including those published posthumously, with key works including his autobiography, The Knee Of Listening, spiritual works such as The Aletheon and The Dawn Horse Testament, and literature such as The Orpheum.[2] He wrote prolifically about his spiritual philosophy, creating the Dawn Horse Press in 1973 to publish his books. It continues to print many Adi Da-authored titles.[9] Best known among these is The Knee Of Listening.[25]: 80 [50] First published in 1972, it has been reissued in a number of editions, undergoing extensive revisions and additions.[106] The first edition was 271 pages long; the latest is 840.[40]: 106  The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements quoted a follower of Adi Da as saying:

The words of Adi Da Samraj, as his devotees can confess, carry a potency that is vastly beyond the verbal meaning, a force that activates fundamental transformations in the being. He invests himself spiritually in all of his writing, and that transmission can be received through reading any of his books.[8]

The Aletheon, in particular, was described as "[o]ne of his most important works… on which he put the finishing touches the day he passed".[8]

Art

Adi Da graduated from Stanford University in 1963.[24][7]: 86–88 [25]: 80 [2] His master's thesis, "a study of core issues in modernism, focused on Gertrude Stein and the leading painters of the same period", demonstrated his interest in art.[26] In the last decade of his life, Adi Da focused on creating works of art intended to enable viewers to enter into a "space" beyond limited "points of view". These works were primarily photographic and digitally produced large works of pigmented inks on paper or canvas, and monumentally sized works of paint on aluminum. He labeled his art "Transcendental Realism". He was invited to the 2007 Venice Biennale to participate through an official collateral exhibition, and was later invited to exhibit his work in Florence, Italy, in the 15th century Cenacolo di Ognissanti and the Bargello Museum. His work has also been shown in New York, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, Miami, and London.

Venice and Florence exhibitions

In 2007 Adi Da's works were included in an official collateral exhibition to the Venice Biennale in Italy. The exhibition was curated by Italian art historian Achille Bonito Oliva.[20][21] The exhibit then moved to Florence. This solo exhibition in Florence was the first to show contemporary art with Renaissance art, juxtaposing Domenico Ghirlandaio's perspectival Last Supper with Adi Da's aperspectival monumental fabrications.[107]

Reviews

The Spectra Suites, a book of Adi Da's art, has an introduction by American art historian and critic Donald Kuspit.[108] Kuspit reviewed the work of Adi Da on several occasions, writing:

It is a rare artist who can convey, convincingly, the sense of being face to face with the source of being. Adi Da can clearly live in the depths without succumbing to their pressure, bringing back pearls of art to prove it.[109]

What is perhaps most striking about Adi Da's photographs is their gnostic quality—the intricate movement of light and shadow that gives them their expressive depth and profound intimacy. It is more than a matter of standard chiaroscuro. Adi Da is not simply employing the evocative power of light and shadow, but bringing out their emblematic character. Interweaving them—and in numerous works skeins of light ("the fire of the sun") play over and within shadowy if transparent water ("the water of life")—Adi Da suggests the union of opposites that is the core of mystical experience. Ecstatic experience of their unity brings with it a sense of the immeasurable.[110]

His death at his home in Fiji occurred in his studio, while working on his art.[1][111]

Reception

Critique

Ken Wilber

From 1980 to 1990, philosophical theorist and author Ken Wilber wrote a number of enthusiastic endorsements and forewords for Adi Da's books, including The Dawn Horse Testament, The Divine Emergence of the World-Teacher, and Scientific Proof of the Existence of God Will Soon Be Announced by the White House![112] Wilber also recommended Adi Da as a spiritual teacher to those interested in his own writings.

Later, Wilber alternated between praise and pointed criticism.[113][114][115] In his last public statement concerning Adi Da he wrote: "I affirm all of the extremes of my statements about Da: he is one of the greatest spiritual Realizers of all time, in my opinion, and yet other aspects of his personality lag far behind those extraordinary heights. By all means, look to him for utterly profound revelations, unequaled in many ways; yet step into his community at your own risk".[116]

Others

In 1982, yoga and religion scholar Georg Feuerstein formally became a follower of Adi Da and wrote a number of introductions to Adi Da books. He later renounced this affiliation, becoming publicly critical of Adi Da and the community surrounding him in Fiji. Feuerstein devoted a chapter to Adi Da in his 1991 book Holy Madness: Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, and Enlightenment.[15]: ch. 4  In the introduction to the 2006 edition, Feuerstein describes having edited the sections devoted to Adi Da to reflect these changes in opinion.[117]

Asian-Religions scholar Scott Lowe was an early follower of Adi Da and lived in the community in 1974. In an essay later analyzing what he had witnessed as well as Adi Da's subsequent career, he perceives a pattern of "abusive, manipulative, and self-centered" behavior, saying "does it necessarily follow that the individual who is 'liberated' is free to indulge in what appear to be egocentric, hurtful, and damaging actions in the name of spiritual freedom? I personally think not, while acknowledging the subtlety and complexity of the ongoing debate".[118][119]

Lowe and others have also criticized Adi Da's claims toward the exclusivity of his realization. In part, critics point to his earlier message, strongly rejecting the necessity for any religious authority or belief, due to "enlightenment" being every individual's natural condition.[13][40]: 98–99 [120]

Adi Da heavily edited subsequent editions of his books, for which they have been criticized as auto-hagiography and self-mythology.[106][121][122]

University of Southern California religion professor Robert Ellwood wrote, "Accounts of life with [Adi Da] in his close-knit spiritual community [describe] extremes of asceticism and indulgence, of authoritarianism and antinomianism… Supporters of the alleged avatar rationalize such eccentricities as shock therapy for the sake of enlightenment".[123][124]

Controversies

In 1985, accusations of misbehavior by Adi Da and some of his followers attracted media attention.[16][125] Adi Da and Adidam (then known as Da Free John and The Johannine Daist Communion) were subjects of almost daily coverage in April of that year in the San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner, Mill Valley Record, and other regional media resources.[24] The story gained national attention with a two-part exposé on The Today Show that aired May 9 and 10.[126]

In investigative reports and interviews, some ex-members made numerous specific allegations of Adi Da forcing members to engage in psychologically, sexually, and physically abusive and humiliating behavior, as well as accusing the church of committing tax fraud. Others stated that they never witnessed or were involved in any such activities.[127][128][129][123][130][131] None of these accusations were substantiated in a court of law.

The church issued conflicting statements in response to the coverage. A lawyer for the church said that controversial sexual activities had only occurred during the "Garbage and Goddess" period years earlier. Shortly after, an official church spokesman said that "tantra-style encounters" of the kind described in allegations were still occurring, but were mostly confined to an inner circle.[132] This confirmed the stories by former members that such activities had continued up to the time of the lawsuits and interviews in 1985.[133][134][135] The church said that no illegal acts had taken place and that the movement had a right to continue experiments in lifestyles.[136][137]

Two lawsuits were filed against Adi Da and his organization in 1985. The first was brought by Beverly O'Mahoney, then wife of the Adidam president, alleging fraud and assault (among other things); the suit sought $5 million in damages.[18] Adidam threatened to file its own lawsuit against O'Mahoney, as well as five others who had been named in stories and interviews making allegations of abuse (no suit was ever filed). Adidam charged that allegations against the church were part of an extortion plot.[138] The O'Mahoney suit was dismissed by the court the next year.[139] The other lawsuit and two threatened suits in the mid-1980s were settled with payments and confidentiality agreements,[140] negatively impacting member morale.[137][141][142] Since the mid-1980s, no lawsuits have been filed against Adi Da or any Adidam organizations.

Jeffrey J. Kripal assessed the charges against Adi Da in the broader context of sexually active gurus, teachers, and Eastern tantric traditions altogether. He noted that although many sects experienced scandals due to sexual escapades collapsing "false fronts of celibacy", which contrasted with Adidam's open period of sexual experimentation.[143] Kripal further wrote:

In this historical American-Asian context, it is hardly surprising that serious ethical charges involving sexual abuse and authoritarian manipulation have been leveled at Adi Da and his community for very similar, if far more open and acknowledged, antinomian practices and ideas. Bay Area journalistic reports from a single month in 1985 are especially salacious, and any full treatment of the erotic within Adidam would need to spend dozens of careful pages analyzing both the accuracy of the reports and the community's interpretation and understanding of the same events, the latter framed largely in the logic of "crazy wisdom", that is, the notion that the enlightened master can employ antinomian shock tactics that appear to be immoral or abusive in order to push his disciples into new forms of awareness and freedom. Perhaps what is most remarkable about the case of Adidam is the simple fact that the community has never denied the most basic substance of the charges, that is, that sexual experimentation was indeed used in the ashrams and that some people experienced these as abusive, particularly in the Garbage and the Goddess Period, even if it has also differed consistently and strongly on their proper interpretation and meaning.[4]

Endorsements

In a foreword to the 2004 edition of Adi Da's autobiography The Knee Of Listening, religious scholar Jeffrey J. Kripal described Adi Da's total corpus as being "the most doctrinally thorough, the most philosophically sophisticated, the most culturally challenging, and the most creatively original literature currently available in the English language".[144][145][146]

Physician and homeopath Gabriel Cousens wrote an endorsement for Adi Da's biography The Promised God-Man Is Here, saying, "it has deepened my experience of Him as the Divine Gift established in the cosmic domain".[147] He also mentions Adi Da in his books Spiritual Nutrition and Tachyon Energy.[148][149] Psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross wrote an endorsement for Adi Da's book Easy Death, referring to it as a "masterpiece".[150]

Philosopher Henry Leroy Finch Jr. wrote that "[i]f there is a man today who is God-illumined, that man is Avatar Adi Da Samraj. There exists nowhere in the world, among Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, or any other groups, anyone who has so much to teach. Avatar Adi Da is a force to be reckoned with, a Pole around which the world can get its bearings".[151]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e . www.fijitimes.com. November 28, 2008. Archived from the original on February 26, 2009. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Obituaries". Columbia College Today. June 2009. Retrieved August 12, 2020.
  3. ^ "An Introduction to Avatar Adi Da". www.adidam.org. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Forsthoefel, Thomas A.; Humes, Cynthia Ann (2005). Gurus in America. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-6573-X.
  5. ^ Chryssides, George D. (2006). The A to Z of New Religious Movements. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. pp. 47–48, 200. ISBN 0-8108-5588-7.
  6. ^ Daniels, Burton (November 2002). The Integration of Psyche and Spirit: Volume I: The Structural Model. Writer's Showcase Press. p. 226. ISBN 0-595-24181-6.
  7. ^ a b c d Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America [Five Volumes]. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-275-98712-4.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Eugene V. Gallagher, "New Religious Movements and Scripture", in James R. Lewis and Inga B. Tollefsen, eds., The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements, Volume II (Oxford University Press, 2016), p. 377.
  9. ^ a b "The "Dawn Horse"". www.dawnhorsepress.com. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  10. ^ Jones, Franklin (1973). The Knee Of Listening, Second Edition. Dawn Horse Press. ASIN B000JDNOWO.
  11. ^ Kripal, Jeffery J. (2004). The Knee Of Listening; foreword to the 2004 edition. Dawn Horse Press. ISBN 1-57097-167-6.
  12. ^ Mei-Ling Israel, Primal Views: Root-Shape and Root-Color, The World As Light, published online in Respiro.org.
  13. ^ a b Wilber, Ken (October 11, 1996). . wilber.shambhala.com. Archived from the original on April 9, 2010. Retrieved February 24, 2010.
  14. ^ Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol IV. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 93. ISBN 0-275-98712-4.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Feuerstein, Georg (1996). "Holy Madness: The Dangerous and Disillusioning Example of Da Free John". What is Enlightenment?. Spring/Summer 1996 (9). ISSN 1080-3432.
  16. ^ a b c Lowe, Scott; Lane, David (1996). DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones. Mt. San Antonio College Philosophy Group. ISBN 1-56543-054-9.
  17. ^ Duke, Lynne (June 12, 2005). "Deep Throat's Daughter, The Kindred Free Spirit". The Washington Post.
  18. ^ a b "Sex Slave Sues Guru: Pacific Isle Orgies Charged". San Francisco Chronicle. April 4, 1985.
  19. ^ Collin, Molly (April 17, 1985). "Da Free John Sect Sues 6 Ex-Members On Extortion Charge". Mill Valley Record.
  20. ^ a b "Venice Biennale Collateral Exhibition: Adi Da Samraj". www.huma3.com. July 11, 2007. Retrieved February 23, 2010.
  21. ^ a b Storr, Robert (2007). La Biennale di Venezia: 52. Esposizione internazionale d'arte, Volume 2. Rizzoli. pp. 312, 337. ISBN 978-0-8478-3001-5.
  22. ^ Lowe, Ed, "The House Where Swami Lived", Long Island Newsday Magazine, September 14, 1986.
  23. ^ a b c d James R. Lewis, The Encyclopedia of Cults, Sects, and New Religions (Prometheus Books, 2001), p. 32-34.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "North Coast Journal, Humboldt County, CA – Cover story Jan. 14, 1999". Northcoastjournal.com. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  25. ^ a b c d e Feuerstein, Georg, "Holy Madness", 1st ed., Arkana (1992).
  26. ^ a b Adi Da Samraj, Eleutherios (The Only Truth That Sets The Heart Free (May 14, 2006), p. 87.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h Jones, Franklin, The Knee Of Listening, Ashram (1972).
  28. ^ Jones, Franklin "The Knee Of Listening: The Life and Understanding of Franklin Jones" (1972), chapter 4 "He had some raw peyote, and we decided to take the drug, although neither of us had any idea what its effects would be. In the past months I had used marijuana a few times and found it very enjoyable and relaxing. And so I willingly accepted a chance for some kind of very powerful "high".
  29. ^ Adi Da, "The Knee Of Listening", Middletown, CA: Dawn Horse Press (1995), p. 168.
  30. ^ Gourley, Edmiston "Adidam Comes to the North Coast", North Coast Journal Weekly, Jan. 14, 1999
  31. ^ Jones, Franklin, The Knee Of Listening (1972), chapter 8 "By the spring of 1965 I had begun to use marijuana frequently. I found it relaxing and particularly necessary under the pressure of work and effort that Rudi required. But the drug began to have a peculiarly negative effect… I would realize a profound anxiety and fear… I took other drugs with my old friends. We took Romilar [cough syrup] again, but now its effects seemed minor… I took a drug called DMT which had a remarkable and miraculous effect… Such remarkable states of awareness combined with my rising sense of anxiety, fear and reluctance in relation to drugs, so that finally, in the early summer of 1965, I determined somehow to stop their use".
  32. ^ Jones, Franklin, The Knee Of Listening (1972), chapter 4 "I voluntarily submitted to drug trials at the V.A. hospital in Fountain View, California… At the V.A. hospital I was given a dose of drugs one day per week. I was told that I would be given mescalin, LSD, or psilocybin at three separate sessions, and, during a fourth session, some combination of these… There were also various bizarre experiences and periods of anxiety… I suffered anxiety attacks and occasional nervousness for perhaps a year beyond the actual tests".
  33. ^ Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol IV, p. 88: "Jones discovered that his psychedelic drug experiences sometimes mimicked the ecstatic states he had known in childhood and was now desperate to recapture".
  34. ^ Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol IV, p. 88.
  35. ^ Jones, Knee, Ashram (1972), p. 22-23 "After my experiences at the VA hospital, I went into a period of relative seclusion… Nina worked as a schoolteacher and supported our living".
  36. ^ Patterson, W.P., The Gurdjieff Journal, "Gurdjieff & The New Age Part IX, Franklin Jones & Rudi Part I"
  37. ^ Jones, Franklin, The Knee Of Listening, Ashram (1972), p. 35: "I saw pictures of a store with oriental sculpture… in New York".
  38. ^ Swami Rudrananda [Rudi]. Spiritual Cannibalism. Links Books, New York, 1973, First Edition[page needed]
  39. ^ Historical dictionary of New Age movements by Michael York The Rowman Litterfield Publishing Group, 2004, pp 11–12.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol IV.
  41. ^ Jones, 'Knee' (1972), chapter 8.
  42. ^ Jones, Franklin, The Knee Of Listening, p. 62.
  43. ^ Gallagher,New and Alternative Religions in America p. 89, "… Jones' himself describes [this event] as… "apparent evidence of a 'clinical breakdown'".
  44. ^ Godman, David (1985). Be As You Are: The Teachings of Sri Ramana Maharshi. England: Arkana. p. 4.
  45. ^ , Franklin, The Knee Of Listening (1972), chapter 9.
  46. ^ Jones, The Knee Of Listening (1972 ed.), p. 192.
  47. ^ Jones, Franklin, The Knee Of Listening, Ashram (1972), p. 84: "I spent that year working for Scientology".
  48. ^ Rawlinson, Andrew, Book of Enlightened Masters: Western Teachers in Eastern Traditions. Open Court (1997) ISBN 0-8126-9310-8 page 222.
  49. ^ Rawlinson, Andrew, Book of Enlightened Masters: Western Teachers in Eastern Traditions Open Court (1997) ISBN 0-8126-9310-8 page 222.
  50. ^ a b Gordon Baumann, Religions of The World- A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO Ltd. (2002). ISBN 1-57607-223-1. page 3: In his autobiography he asserts that he was born in a state of perfect awareness…. Jones spent his college and subsequent years in a spiritual quest…
  51. ^ Feuerstein, Georg. (2006). Holy Madness: Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, And Enlightenment, Hohm Press. ISBN 1-890772-54-2.
  52. ^ Peter J. Columbus, The Relevance of Alan Watts in Contemporary Culture (2021), p. 98.
  53. ^ Bob Larson, Larson's Book of World Religions and Alternative Spirituality (2004), p. 137.
  54. ^ Adi Da capitalized terms that he felt expressed the divine.
  55. ^ a b Kripal, Jeffrey J. (2014). Comparing Religions, 1st Edition', Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-40518-458-8.
  56. ^ Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol. V. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 85. ISBN 0-275-98712-4. …began to attract a small following
  57. ^ Lattin, Don (April 5, 1985). "Hypnotic Da Free John – Svengali of the truth-seeking set". San Francisco Examiner.
  58. ^ a b "The Gurdjieff Journal", Gurdjieff & The New Age Part IX, Franklin Jones & Rudi Part I, by William Patrick Patterson
  59. ^ Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol. IV, pp. 85–86.
  60. ^ Lowe, Scott and Lane, David. (1996) "DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones", Mt. San Antonio College Philosophy Group: "In his evening talks, Da Free John frequently referred to Muktananda as a "black magician". Muktananda spoke of his former student in similar terms".
  61. ^ Feuerstein, Holy Madness, p. 83 "[Jones] believed that his guru was settling for less than the ultimate, while Muk. dismissed [Jones] arguments as pretentious… a breach between them opened that never formally healed. [Jones] continued to criticize Muk. in talks and publications, while at the same time acknowledging his debt".
  62. ^ Gourley, Edmiston "Adidam Comes to the North Coast", North Coast Journal Weekly (Jan. 14, 1999).
  63. ^ The Yoga Tradition: Its History, Literature, Philosophy and Practice By Georg Feuerstein; p. 25.
  64. ^ Feuerstein, "Holy Madness", (1992), p. 84 "(students) experienced visions, spontaneous body movements known as kriyas, bliss states, heart openings, kundalini arousals, and several were apparently drawn into the mystical unitive state or even into temporary sahaja-samadhi".
  65. ^ Feuerstein, "Holy Madness", (1992), p. 84
  66. ^ Feuerstein (1992), pp. 266–267: "Due to the controversial nature of material in the book, almost immediately at the behest of Da Love Ananda, every effort was made to retrieve all existing copies".
  67. ^ Butler, Katy: "Sex Practices Did Not Cease, Marin Cult Officials Admit" San Francisco Chronicle, April 9, 1985
  68. ^ Feuerstein, "Holy Madness", p. 86-87
  69. ^ Bubba Free John, "Garbage and the Goddess" (Lower Lake, CA: Dawn Horse Press, 1974), pp. 16, 31.
  70. ^ Gurdjieff Journal: "In particular, Bubba attacked the "cult of pairs" and notions of marriage in particular, which he said only serves the seeking and separateness which at root are the denial of the Divinity of the simple here and now… Bubba first told them: "The instant you marry, you must discard it. Otherwise marriage is another cultic form, a sex contract, in which you become medievally involved with personality forms, making yourself strategically unavailable to the rest of life, and again mutually create the sensation of separate existence, including "poor me" or "fantastic me"… The cult of marriage is a principal obstacle in the affair of the spiritual Community…" Bubba then broke up couples and marriages and began what was called the "sexual theater", that of switching partners, instituting orgies and making pornographic movies.
  71. ^ Free John, Bubba, "Garbage and the Goddess: the last Miracles and Final Spiritual Instructions of Bubba Free John", DHP (1974), p. 13 "This is what the spiritual life is all about… nothing conventional survives".
  72. ^ Feuerstein, "Holy Madness", 2006, p. 157.
  73. ^ Michael Anthony Costabile, "Sexual Practice, Spiritual Awakening, and Divine Self-Realization in the Reality-Way of Adidam", in Henrik Bogdan and James R. Lewis, Sexuality and New Religious Movements (PSNRAS; Springer, 2014).
  74. ^ Feuerstein, Georg and Feuerstein, Patricia Remembrance Of The Divine Names of Da (1982), ISBN 0-913922-72-2
  75. ^ Leydecker, Mary: "Suit Shatters Calm for Sect Members", Marin Independent-Journal (April 5, 1985).
  76. ^ a b The Eternal Stand, complied and narrated by Jonathan Condit (Dawn Horse Press, 2014), p. 16-17, 31, 44, 365.
  77. ^ Feuerstein, Georg. (2006). Holy Madness: Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, An Enlightenment, Hohm Press. ISBN 1-890772-54-2 pp. 166 – 167 "In a talk given at the end of February 1986, he explained that on that eventful morning he had spoken to his close devotees of his grief, sorrow and frustration at the seeming futility of his teaching work. He had told them that he could no longer endure their rejection and abuse and that he wished to die quickly."
  78. ^ Feuerstein, Georg. (2006). Holy Madness: Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, And Enlightenment, Hohm Press. ISBN 1-890772-54-2, p. 166–167: "He explained that most enlightened beings "incarnate only partially" into the body. Adi Da said that in this event he "descended" fully into the body, becoming "utterly human"… it was sufficient for disciples to simply meditate upon him to "participate in his enlightened state".
  79. ^ Carolyn Lee, The Avatar of What Is, (The Dawn Horse Press, 2007 [2017]), p. 85-87, 89-90, 95.
  80. ^ Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol IV, p. 95.
  81. ^ Carolyn Lee, The Avatar of What Is, (The Dawn Horse Press, 2007 [2017]), p. 112-118.
  82. ^ . Archived from the original on June 27, 2009. Retrieved June 2, 2010.
  83. ^ Feuerstein (2006), p. 169.
  84. ^ a b The Aletheon, vol. 7 (2009), p. 1888-91.
  85. ^ a b The Dawn Horse Testament, (1985), p. 116-117.
  86. ^ Gallagher, Eugene, Ashcraft, Michael. (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Volume V, p. 98.
  87. ^ Avabhasa, Da (1992). The Method of the Siddhas. California: The Dawn Horse Press. p. 25.
  88. ^ Gallagher, Eugene, Ashcraft, Michael. (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Volume V, p. 97-98.
  89. ^ The Method of the Siddhas (1992). p. 195
  90. ^ Eugene V. Gallagher, W. Michael Ashcraft, Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America [Five Volumes], Greenwood Press (2006), p. 99, ISBN 0-275-98712-4.
  91. ^ a b c d e Samraj, Adi Da, The Knee Of Listening, "I (Alone) Am The Adidam Revelation" (2004), Dawn Horse Press. ISBN 1-57097-167-6
  92. ^ Samraj (2005b), p. 93.
  93. ^ Gallagher… New Religions, p. 100
  94. ^ Samraj, Adi Da, Eleutherios, Dawn Horse Press, 2006, p. 456; "I Am the First (and the Only One) to Realize and to Demonstrate seventh stage Realization, which (now, and forever hereafter) I Alone, and Uniquely, Reveal and Transmit to all my formally practicing true devotees and thus potentially to all beings".
  95. ^ Feuerstein, Georg. (2006) Holy Madness, p. 167 "it was sufficient for disciples to simply meditate upon him to "participate in his enlightened state".
  96. ^ Gallagher/Ashcraft, Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, p. 99.
  97. ^ George D. Chryssides, The A to Z of New Religious Movements, Rowan Litterfield Publishing Group, 2001, p. 47.
  98. ^ Reilly, Gary; "How Franklin Jones Became the Master", The Mill Valley Record/April 3, 1985.
  99. ^ Gallagher, The New Religious Movements Experience in America, p. 98-99.
  100. ^ Feuerstein 1992, p. 98.
  101. ^ "America 2004, Page 118".
  102. ^ Adi Da Samraj, The Aletheon (The Dawn Horse Press, 2009).
  103. ^ Samraj, Adi Da, "The Orders of My True and Free Renunciate Devotees", Dawn Horse Press (2007), pg. 110: "all those who truly devotionally recognize Avatar Adi Da serve as "instruments" of His Blessing-Regard in the world".
  104. ^ Gallagher, The New Religious Movements Experience in America, p. 97.
  105. ^ Feuerstein 1992, p. 93: "[He] has a flair for drama and it has been successful in keeping the attention of [some] for years… but it evidently is not a way that holds an attraction for larger numbers of spiritually motivated people".
  106. ^ a b Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, Vol IV, p. 106: "Jones significantly modified later editions of Knee… in later editions, Jones' childhood is presented as utterly exceptional… It is clear that Jones' autobiography might best be understood as a kind of auto-hagiography, since its purpose is to preserve for posterity a sanitized, mythologized, and highly selective account of Jones' life and spiritual adventures".
  107. ^ Gary Coates, The Rebirth of Sacred Art: Reflections on the Aperspectival (2013), p. 8.
  108. ^ Welcome Books (2007), pp 1–11.
  109. ^ Donald Kuspit in The World As Light: An Introduction to the Art of Adi Da Samraj, by Mei-Ling Israel, Dawn Horse Press, 2007.
  110. ^ Donald Kuspit, "The Female Nude in the Art of Adi Da", in Louis Stern Fine Arts gallery, The Quandra Loka Suite: 52 Views by Adi Da Samraj.
  111. ^ . Archived from the original on June 27, 2009. Retrieved June 2, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  112. ^ Wilber, Ken (1985) Review of Adi Da's The Dawn Horse Testament – www.adidawilber.com
  113. ^ The Case of Adi Da 2008-02-13 at the Wayback Machine Ken Wilber Online. October 11, 1996.
  114. ^ Ken Wilber, Ken (1997) "Private" letter to the Adidam community – www.adidawilber.com
  115. ^ . Wilber.shambhala.com. August 28, 1998. Archived from the original on March 27, 2010. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  116. ^ An Update on the Case of Adi Da March 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Ken Wilber Online. August 28, 1998.
  117. ^ Feuerstein (2006), intro., chapter 4.
  118. ^ "Lowe, Scott and Lane, David. (1996) DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones. Mt. San Antonio College Philosophy Group.
  119. ^ . Lightgate.net. Archived from the original on January 8, 2010. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  120. ^ Lowe, Scott and Lane, David. (1996) "DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones". Mt. San Antonio College Philosophy Group, p. 23.
  121. ^ Feuerstein (1992), pp. 83, 96: "the original published version has the ring of authenticity and can be appreciated as a remarkable mystical document… Later [editions], regrettably, tend toward mythologization".
  122. ^ "Da: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones", by Scott Lowe and David Lane, Walnut CA: Mt. San Antonio College (1996).
  123. ^ a b Molly Colin, Peter Seidman, and Tony Lewis, "Defectors voice several charges", Mill Valley Record/April 3, 1985.
  124. ^ Ellwood, Robert. (1997)"Nova Religio" book review of "DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones" (October 1997), Vol. 1, No. 1, Pages 153–153.
  125. ^ Molly Colin, Peter Seidman, and Tony Lewis, "Defectors voice several charges" Mill Valley Record/April 3, 1985.
  126. ^ NBC Today Show, May 9, 1985.
  127. ^ Feuerstein, Georg (1996), "Holy Madness: The Dangerous and Disillusioning Example of Da Free John", What Is Enlightenment? Issue 9.
  128. ^ Seidman, Peter, "Sexual experiments continued after '76, JDC officiaIs admit", Mill Valley Record/April 10, 1985.
  129. ^ Butler, Katy: "Sex Practices Did Not Cease, Marin Cult Officials Admit", San Francisco Chronicle, April 9, 1985.
  130. ^ Neary, Walt,'Inner Circle Privy to Parties,' Lake County Record Bee, April 12, 1985.
  131. ^ Sex Slave Sues Guru: Pacific Isle Orgies Charged San Francisco Chronicle, April 4, 1985.
  132. ^ Feuerstein, "Holy Madness", Arkana (1992), p. 90 "sexual [experiments] were for the most part confined to an inner circle. But occasionally some relative newcomers were included. This happened to one couple in 1982, who provide this fascinating extensive account… (p. 92) Tantra-style encounters of this kind occurred periodically and more or less secretly until at least the end of 1985, and led to legal difficulties".
  133. ^ The San Francisco Chronicle, April 9, 1985.
  134. ^ Channel 2 News, San Francisco, March, 1985.
  135. ^ Seidman, Peter, "Sexual experiments continued after '76, JDC officials admit" Mill Valley Record/April 10, 1985.
  136. ^ The Mill Valley Record, April 10, 1985.
  137. ^ a b Gourley, Scott R.; Edmiston, Rosemary (January 14, 1999). "Adidam Comes to the Northcoast". North Coast Journal, Humboldt County, CA.
  138. ^ Molly Colin, "Da Free John Sect Sues 6 Ex-Members On Extortion Charge, The Mill Valley Record, April 17, 1985.
  139. ^ Wildermuth, John, "Sex Guru Touts Celibacy", The San Francisco Chronicle, June 16th, 1986, noting that "a Marin County judge ruled that O'Mahony had no legal basis for bringing the (lawsuit)".
  140. ^ "Deep Throat's Daughter, The Kindred Free Spirit", Washington Post, June 12, 2005 "The lawsuits and threatened suits that dogged the group in the mid-1980s were settled with payments and confidentiality agreements, says a California lawyer, Ford Greene, who handled three such cases".
  141. ^ Gallagher… Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol. IV, p. 93.
  142. ^ Feuerstein, "Holy Madness", Arkana (1992), p. 267-268: "Over the years, [Jones] has been sued several times by disaffected students, although institutional representatives have so far succeeded in keeping him out of court. Cases were settled by arbitration, which bled the [church] financially".
  143. ^ Jeffrey J. Kripal, "Riding the Dawn Horse: Adi Da and the Eros of Nonduality", in Thomas Forsthoefel and Cynthia Ann Humes, eds., Gurus In America (SUNY Press, 2005), p. 199.
  144. ^ Jeffrey J. Kripal, Introduction, in Radical Transcendentalism (2007).
  145. ^ Samraj, Adi Da (2004). "Foreword". The Knee Of Listening. p. xiv.
  146. ^ . Kneeoflistening.com. November 2, 2003. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  147. ^ The Ruchira Sannyasin Order of Adidam Ruchiradam (March 3, 2003). Adi Da: The Promised God-Man Is Here. Dawn Horse Press. ISBN 1-57097-143-9.
  148. ^ Cousens, Gabriel (2005). Spiritual Nutrition: Six Foundations for Spiritual Life and the Awakening of Kundalini. North Atlantic Books. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-55643-499-0.
  149. ^ Cousens, Gabriel (2005). Tachyon Energy: A New Paradigm in Holistic Healing. North Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-55643-310-8.
  150. ^ Easy Death: Spiritual Wisdom on the Ultimate. Dawn Horse Press. August 31, 2005. ISBN 1-57097-202-8.
  151. ^ Henry Leroy Finch Jr., Introduction, in Ruchira Avatara Gita (The Way of the Divine Heart-Master): The Five Books of the Heart of the Adidam Revelation (1998).

References

  • Chryssides, George. (2001). The A to Z of New Religious Movements. The Rowman Litterfield Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8108-5588-5
  • Cousens, Gabriel. (2005). Spiritual Nutrition: Six Foundations for Spiritual Life and the Awakening of Kundalini. North Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-55643-499-0
  • Crowley, Paul. (2005). Rahner beyond Rahner: A Great Theologian Encounters the Pacific Rim. Rowman & Litterfield. ISBN Number 074254964X
  • Daniels, Burton. (2002). The Integration of Psyche and Spirit Volume I: The Structural Model. iUniverse. ISBN 0-595-24181-6
  • Ellwood, Robert. (1997)"Nova Religio" book review of "DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones", October 1997, Vol. 1, No. 1, Pages 153–153.
  • Feuerstein, Georg. (1992). Holy Madness: Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, And Enlightenment, Penguin. ISBN 0-14-019370-7
  • Feuerstein, Georg. (2006). Holy Madness: Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, And Enlightenment, Rev Exp edition, Hohm Press. ISBN 1-890772-54-2
  • Forsthoefel, Thomas A. & Humes, Cynthia Ann. (2005). Gurus in America (SUNY Series in Hindu Studies), State University of New York Press. ISBN 9781423748687
  • Gallagher, Eugene & Ashcraft, Michael. (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America [Five Volumes]. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-275-98712-4
  • Gordon, Melton, Gale J. (1999). Religious Leaders of America: A Biographical Guide to Founders and Leaders. 2nd Revised edition. Gale Research Company. ISBN 0-8103-8878-2.
  • Melton, Gordon & Baumann, Martin. (2002). Religions of The World-A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO Ltd. ISBN 1-57607-223-1
  • Jones, Franklin. (1972). The Knee Of Listening. CSA Press. ISBN 978-0-87707-093-1
  • Kripal, Jeffrey J. (2004). Foreword to 'The Knee Of Listening', Dawn Horse Press. ISBN 1-57097-167-6
  • Kripal, Jeffrey J. (2014). Comparing Religions, 1st Edition', Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-40518-458-8
  • Lewis, James R. (2001). Odd Gods: New Religions and the Cult Controversy Book, Prometheus Books. ISBN 1-57392-842-9
  • Lowe, Scott & Lane, David. (1996) "DA: The Strange Case of Franklin Jones". Mt. San Antonio College Philosophy Group.
  • Rawlinson, Andrew. Book of Enlightened Masters: Western Teachers in Eastern Traditions. Open Court, (1997),ISBN 0-8126-9310-8
  • York, Michael. (2004). Historical Dictionary of New Age Movements. The Rowman Litterfield Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8108-4873-3

External links

  • Adidam.org, Official Adidam website
  • AdiDaControversies.org, Adidam website addressing controversies about Adi Da

samraj, born, franklin, albert, jones, november, 1939, november, 2008, american, born, spiritual, teacher, writer, artist, founder, religious, movement, known, adidam, samraj, samraj, 2008bornfranklin, albert, jones, 1939, november, 1939new, york, york, diedno. Adi Da Samraj born Franklin Albert Jones November 3 1939 November 27 2008 1 was an American born spiritual teacher writer and artist 3 He was the founder of a new religious movement known as Adidam Adi Da SamrajAdi Da Samraj in 2008BornFranklin Albert Jones 1939 11 03 November 3 1939New York New York U S DiedNovember 27 2008 2008 11 27 aged 69 1 2 Naitauba Lau Islands FijiOther namesBubba Free John Da Free John Da Love Ananda Da Avabhasa Adi Da Love Ananda SamrajAlma materColumbia UniversityStanford UniversityOccupation s Spiritual teacher writer and artistKnown forFounder of AdidamChildrenFour including Shawnee Free JonesAdi Da initially became known in the spiritual counterculture of the 1970s for his books and public talks and for the activities of his religious community He authored more than 75 books including those published posthumously with key works including an autobiography The Knee Of Listening spiritual works such as The Aletheon and The Dawn Horse Testament and social philosophy such as Not Two Is Peace 2 Adi Da s teaching is closely related to the Indian tradition of nondualism 4 197 He taught that the ego the presumption of a separate self is an illusion and that all efforts to attain enlightenment or unity with the divine from that point of view are necessarily futile 5 Reality or Truth he said is always already the case 4 198 it cannot be found through any form of seeking it can only be realized through transcendence of the illusions of separate self in the devotional relationship to the already realized being 6 Distinguishing his teaching from other religious traditions Adi Da declared that he was a uniquely historic avatar and that the practice of devotional recognition response to him in conjunction with most fundamental self understanding was the sole means of awakening to seventh stage spiritual enlightenment for others 7 99 Chogyam Trungpa reportedly remarked that i t is tremendously difficult to begin a new tradition of spirituality as Adi Da had done 8 Adi Da founded a publishing house the Dawn Horse Press to print his books 9 He was praised by authorities in spirituality philosophy sociology literature and art 8 10 11 12 but was also criticized for what were perceived as his isolation 13 14 and controversial behavior 15 16 In 1985 former followers made allegations of misconduct 17 18 two lawsuits were filed to which Adidam responded with threats of counter litigation 19 The principal lawsuit was dismissed and the other was settled out of court In his later years Adi Da focused on creating works of art intended to enable viewers to enter into a space beyond limited points of view He was invited to the 2007 Venice Biennale to participate through an official collateral exhibition and was later invited to exhibit his work in Florence Italy in the 15th century Cenacolo di Ognissanti and the Bargello museum 20 21 His work was also shown in New York Los Angeles Amsterdam Miami and London Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Youth and formal education 1939 1964 1 2 Spiritual exploration 1964 1970 1 3 Becoming a spiritual teacher 1970 1973 1 4 Crazy Wisdom 1973 1983 1 5 Divine Emergence and final years 1983 2008 2 Teachings 2 1 Self contraction 2 2 Seventh stage realization 3 Adidam 4 Works 4 1 Books 4 2 Art 4 2 1 Venice and Florence exhibitions 4 2 2 Reviews 5 Reception 5 1 Critique 5 1 1 Ken Wilber 5 1 2 Others 5 1 3 Controversies 5 2 Endorsements 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksBiography EditYouth and formal education 1939 1964 Edit Adi Da as an infant 1940 Born in Queens New York and raised on Long Island 22 his father was a salesman and his mother a housewife Adi Da claimed in his autobiography The Knee Of Listening that he was born in a state of perfect freedom and awareness of ultimate reality which he called the Bright and that he sacrificed that reality at the age of two so that he could completely identify with the limitations and mortality of suffering humanity in order to discover ways to help others awaken to the unlimited and deathless happiness of the Heart 23 A sister Joanne was born when he was eight years old He served as an acolyte in the Lutheran church during his adolescence and aspired to be a minister but after leaving for college in the autumn of 1957 24 expressed doubts about the religion to his Lutheran pastor Adi Da attended Columbia University where he graduated in 1961 with a bachelor s degree in philosophy He went on to complete a master s degree in English literature at Stanford University in 1963 under the guidance of novelist and historian Wallace Stegner 24 7 86 88 25 80 2 His master s thesis was a study of core issues in modernism focused on Gertrude Stein and the leading painters of the same period 26 During and after his postgraduate studies Adi Da engaged in an experiment of exhaustive writing a process in which he wrote continuously for eight or more hours daily as a kind of yoga where every movement of conscious awareness all experiences internal or external were monitored and recorded In this exercise he felt that he discovered a structure or myth that governed all human conscious awareness a schism in Reality that was the logic or process of separation itself of enclosure and immunity the source of all presumed self identity 27 94 He understood this to be the same logic hidden in the ancient Greek myth of Narcissus the adored child of the gods who was condemned to the contemplation of his own image and suffered the fate of eternal separateness He concluded that the death of Narcissus was required to fulfill what he felt was the guiding purpose of his life which was to awaken to the Spiritually Bright Condition of Consciousness Itself that was prior to Narcissus and communicate this awakening to others 27 94 In the context of this exploration of consciousness in 1963 Adi Da experimented with various hallucinogenic and other drugs 28 29 For 6 weeks he was a paid test subject in drug trials of mescaline LSD and psilocybin conducted at a Veterans Administration hospital in California 30 He wrote later that he found these experiences self validating in that they mimicked ecstatic states of consciousness from his childhood but problematic as they often resulted in paranoia anxiety or disassociation 31 32 33 While living with the support of his girlfriend Nina Davis in the hills of Palo Alto 34 he continued to write meditated informally and studied books by C G Jung H P Blavatsky and Edgar Cayce in order to make sense of his experiences 35 36 Spiritual exploration 1964 1970 Edit In June 1964 Adi Da responded to an intuitive impulse to leave California in search of a spiritual teacher in New York City 37 Settling in Greenwich Village he became a student of Albert Rudolph also known as Rudi a dealer in Asian art who had been a disciple of the Indian guru Bhagavan Nityananda When Nityananda died in 1961 Rudi became a student of Siddha Yoga s founder Swami Muktananda who gave him the name Swami Rudrananda Having studied a number of spiritual traditions including The Work of G I Gurdjieff and Subud Rudi taught an eclectic blend of techniques he called kundalini yoga 38 39 although it was not related to the Indian tradition by that name 40 88 15 81 Feeling that Adi Da needed better grounding Rudi insisted that he marry Nina find steady employment improve his physical health end his drug use and begin preparatory studies to enter the seminary 25 81 41 As a student at Philadelphia s Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1967 Adi Da described undergoing a terrifying breakdown Taken to a hospital emergency room a psychiatrist diagnosed it as an anxiety attack 42 It was the first of a number of such episodes each followed by what he described as profound awakenings or insights 25 81 43 He described the episodes as a kind of death or release from identity with the presumed separate persona after which there was only an Infinite Bliss of Being an untouched unborn Sublimity without separation without individuation There was only Reality Itself the unqualified living condition of the totality of conditionally manifested existence A comparable pre awakening process had been described by the renowned Indian sage Ramana Maharshi 44 Feeling none of his Lutheran professors understood this experience Adi Da left and briefly attended St Vladimir s Russian Orthodox Seminary in Tuckahoe New York 45 Disillusioned he moved back to New York City and found employment with Pan American Airlines hoping this might help him fulfill his desire to visit Swami Muktananda s ashram in India Swami Muktananda a disciple of Bhagavan Nityananda was a well known guru who had brought his tradition of Kashmir Shaivism to the West establishing meditation centers around the world Adi Da received formal permission to visit the ashram for four days in April 1968 Muktananda encouraged him to end his studies with Rudi and study with himself directly 7 85 In his autobiography Adi Da related how he was granted shaktipat initiation the awakening of the Kundalini Shakti that is said to reside at the base of the spine which deepens the practice of Siddha Yoga meditation Adi Da described experiencing an awakening to the Witness consciousness beyond identification with the point of view of bodily consciousness He began to study formally with Swami Muktananda 46 After returning to New York Adi Da and Nina became members and then employees of the Church of Scientology 47 leaving after a little more than a year of involvement Adi Da returned to India for a month long visit in early 1969 during which he received a handwritten and formally translated letter from Swami Muktananda granting him the spiritual names Dhyanananda and Love Ananda 27 221 227 and authorizing him to initiate others into Siddha Yoga 48 15 81 82 In May 1970 Adi Da Nina and a friend named Pat Morley traveled to India for what they believed would be an indefinite period living at Swami Muktananda s ashram However Adi Da was disappointed by his experience there especially by the institutionalization of the ashram and the large numbers of westerners who had arrived since his previous visit 27 122 264 267 Three weeks after arriving he visited the burial place of Bhagavan Nityananda and by his account received an immense transmission of the Shakti Force According to his autobiography he began to his great surprise to see visions of the Virgin Mary which he interpreted as a personification of the divine feminine power or shakti The vision of Mary directed him to make a pilgrimage to Christian holy sites After embarking on a two week pilgrimage to holy places in Europe and the Middle East he Nina and Pat returned to New York In August 1970 they moved to Los Angeles 24 15 82 27 131 Becoming a spiritual teacher 1970 1973 Edit Adi Da in Los Angeles 1973 Adi Da wrote in his autobiography that in September 1970 while sitting in the Vedanta Society Temple in Hollywood 15 82 he awakened fully into the state of perfect spiritual enlightenment that he called The Bright 15 82 40 91 49 He wrote that although he had been born with full awareness of the Bright this awareness became obscured in childhood and his subsequent spiritual journey had been a quest to recapture it and share it with others 50 51 146 147 The autobiography entitled The Knee Of Listening was published in 1972 It included a foreword by the well known spiritual philosopher Alan Watts 52 who on studying Adi Da s teachings had reportedly said It looks like we have an avatar here I ve been waiting for such a one all my life 53 In the foreword he wrote It is obvious from all sorts of subtle details that he knows what IT s all about a rare being In The Knee Of Listening and subsequent books Adi Da spoke of Consciousness Itself as the ultimate nature of Reality 54 This Consciousness is Transcendent and Radiant the Source Condition of everything that is the uncaused immortal Self a Conscious Light utterly beyond the limited perspective of any ego any religion or any culture 55 Everything in the physical universe he claimed is a modification of this Conscious Light Expressed in more conventional language Adi Da s realization was that there is only God and that everything arises within that One 55 In later years this was summed up in the three great sayings of Adidam There is no ultimate difference between you and the Divine There is only the Divine Everything that exists is a modification of the One Divine Reality 4 200 When Swami Muktananda stopped in California on a worldwide tour in October 1970 Adi Da visited him and related his experience the previous month of The Bright He felt that the swami did not understand or properly acknowledge the full importance of his realization of Consciousness Itself prior to visions and yogic phenomena and indeed all experiences in the context of the body mind During the visit Adi Da reconciled with Rudi 27 101 102 In 1972 Adi Da opened Ashram Books later Dawn Horse Books a spiritual center and bookshop in Los Angeles He began with a simple and traditional teaching method sitting formally with a small group in the meditation hall and simply transmitting his state of perfect Happiness to them He began giving discourses soon attracting a small following due in part to his charismatic speaking style 56 57 He taught in a traditional Indian style speaking from a raised dais surrounded by flowers and oriental carpets with listeners seated on the floor He incorporated many elements of the guru devotee relationship associated with the Kashmir Shaivite and Advaita Vedanta schools of Hinduism but also expressed original insights and opinions about both spirituality and secular culture 58 40 88 89 As the gathering grew he introduced disciplines related to money food sex and community living 23 He was one of the first westerners to become well known as a teacher of meditation and eastern esoteric traditions at a time when these were of growing interest 40 88 Some early participants stated that Adi Da demonstrated an ability to produce alterations in their consciousness likening the effect to shaktipat of Indian yoga traditions 59 In 1972 he began to teach radical understanding described as a combination of discriminative self observation and guru devotion 23 With the number of followers increasing a formal religious community The Dawn Horse Communion was established In 1973 Adi Da traveled to India to meet a final time with Swami Muktananda They disagreed on a series of questions which Adi Da had prepared creating a rupture in their relationship They later criticized each other s approach to spiritual matters 60 Adi Da nevertheless stated that he continued to appreciate and respect his former guru and to express his love and gratitude for the incomparable service Muktananda had performed for him 27 ch 13 40 90 91 61 The Mountain of Attention Sanctuary in Lake County CaliforniaUpon returning to Los Angeles Adi Da then Franklin Jones assumed the name Bubba Free John based on a nickname meaning friend combined with a rendering of Franklin Jones He and Nina divorced although she remained a follower 15 87 94 In January 1974 Adi Da told his followers that he was the divine lord in human form 62 Later that year the church obtained an aging hot springs resort in Lake County California renaming it Persimmon it is now known as The Mountain of Attention Adi Da and a group of selected followers moved there and experimented in communal living 24 58 15 83 Most followers relocated from Los Angeles to San Francisco where Dawn Horse Books also moved Crazy Wisdom 1973 1983 Edit Adi Da during the Garbage and the Goddess period 1974 In 1973 Adi Da began to use more unconventional means of instruction which he called crazy wisdom comparing it to a tradition of yogic adepts who employed seemingly un spiritual methods to awaken disciples 63 Some followers reported having profound metaphysical experiences in Adi Da s presence attributing these phenomena to his spiritual power 64 Others present remained skeptical witnessing nothing supernatural 16 Adi Da initiated a series of teachings and activities that came to be known as the Garbage and the Goddess period based on the title of his fourth book Garbage and the Goddess The Last Miracles and Final Spiritual Instructions of Bubba Free John The text recounts a four to five month teaching demonstration by Adi Da in which he initiated and freely participated in a cycle of activities of a celebratory wild and ecstatic nature an overturning of previous restrictions and conventional behaviours that was often accompanied by spontaneous displays of spiritual power 65 Many of his devotees spoke of experiencing visionary states of consciousness kundalini phenomena blissful states and so forth However Adi Da constantly reiterated that such experiences were only manifestations of the Goddess and her phenomenal world they were not spiritually auspicious and had no bearing on the realization of Consciousness itself 4 The book s central message that true spiritual life has nothing to do with extraordinary experiences hence the garbage reference in the title did not stop people from showing up looking for both such experiences and the extravagant parties and activities portrayed in the book This was not the message Adi Da wanted to send Despite the book s commercial success the community ultimately chose to withdraw it from the market 4 66 Over a period of years Adi Da entered into what he called emotional sexual reality consideration with his formal devotees It included sexual theater a form of psychodrama that sometimes involved the switching of partners the making of pornographic movies orgies and other intensified sexual practices with the aim of revealing and releasing emotional and sexual neuroses 67 68 Adi Da spoke of the cultish and contractual nature of conventional relationships particularly marriage as being a form of reinforcement of the ego personality and an obstacle to spiritual life Many couples were initially encouraged to switch partners and experiment sexually 69 15 84 70 Drug and alcohol use were sometimes encouraged and earlier proscriptions against meat and junk food were no longer adhered to for periods of time 15 90 Adi Da said that the emotional sexual consideration was part of a radical overturning of conventional moral values and social contracts 15 84 86 89 71 obliging devotees to confront their habitual patterns and emotional attachments According to his teaching little of spiritual value can be accomplished until the emotional sexual nature of the human being is understood incorporated into spiritual practice and transcended 72 Human sexuality he said always deeply encodes social practices identity formation and the most secret and important truths about individuals He said that his present work in this area could not have been as effective without the earlier cultural and philosophical groundwork laid by Freud s depth psychoanalysis 4 After years of consideration about sexuality with students Adi Da summarized his instruction about sexuality and spiritual practice Contrary to various tantric practices aimed at the transformation of sexual energy into spiritual energy Adi Da maintains that sex like everything to do with the body is not causative relative to spirituality at most sex and a disciplined practice of emotional sexual intimacy can be made compatible with the spiritual process The spiritual process he emphasized involves transcendence of identification with the body mind altogether 73 In 1979 Adi Da changed his name from Bubba Free John to Da Free John Da being a Sanskrit syllable meaning the One Who Gives 23 signifying to his devotees the divine nature of his revelation as guru He also established a second ashram in Hawaii now called Da Love Ananda Mahal Over the next decade Adi Da changed his name several times saying it reflected differences or changes in the nature of his message and relationship to followers Subsequent names included Da Love Ananda Dau Loloma Da Kalki Hridaya Samartha Sat Guru Da Santosha Da Da Avadhoota Da Avabhasa and from 1994 Adi Da Love Ananda Samraj or Adi Da 24 40 85 105 74 Divine Emergence and final years 1983 2008 Edit Adi Da at The Mountain of Attention Sanctuary 1986 Even before Adi Da opened the ashram bookstore in Los Angeles in 1972 he stated that people need holy places where Spiritual Force is alive In 1983 having established such empowered places in Northern California and Hawaii Adi Da moved with a group of about 40 followers to the Fijian island of Naitauba purchased by a wealthy follower from the actor Raymond Burr 75 76 His intention was to establish a set apart hermitage for his spiritual work in the world 76 Adi Da Samraj became a citizen of Fiji in 1993 It was his primary residence until the end of his life 1 On Naitauba Island on January 11 1986 while expressing deep distress at what he felt was the futility of his work Adi Da described the feeling of the life force leaving his body before collapsing going into convulsions and losing consciousness Doctors found his vital signs to be present although his breathing was almost imperceptible They eventually succeeded in resuscitating him He later described the episode as a literal death experience with a special significance for his teaching work His reassociation with the body was accompanied he said by a profound impulse of love and compassion for suffering beings This impulse initiated a complete descent of the Bright into his human body so that the divine became incarnated in human form in an unprecedented manner The event became known in the Communion as his Divine Emergence 77 After this event Adi Da expressed an impulse to enable people everywhere to meditate on his image or body in order to participate in his enlightened state 78 He began a period of intensive fasting before leaving Fiji for California At The Mountain Of Attention Sanctuary he sat silently with over a thousand people read from his book The Lion Sutra and gave discourses calling on devotees to embrace the inherently renunciate ego transcending nature of the way he had given He later traveled to New York City London Paris and Amsterdam silently giving his blessing to all who came visibly into his sphere 79 Following the death of spiritual teacher Frederick Lenz Zen Master Rama in 1998 some followers of Lenz joined Adidam Adi Da actively supported Lenz s followers joining his organization according to religious studies professor Eugene V Gallagher Adi Da claimed to have been Swami Vivekananda in a past life with Lenz having been Vivekenanda s disciple Rama Tirtha 80 In the late 1990s Adi Da often spoke of dark forces that were becoming increasingly powerful in the world telling devotees of his constant engagement with these forces and his unarmoured receptivity to the pain and misery of the countless people suffering These processes he said had a devastating effect on his body and in April 2000 while traveling in Northern California under the care of devotees he became almost completely physically incapacitated On April 12 at Lopez Island in the presence of a number of devotees he again experienced a process of disassociation from the physical resembling death In this event he said he became fully established as the Bright Itself in a living demonstration of what he calls Divine Translation Only the knowledge that his work in human form had not yet been completed he said maintained his connection to the world and drew him back into embodiment Adidam later acquired the property on Lopez Island where this had taken place renaming it Ruchira Dham Hermitage the event itself which Adi Da discusses in detail in part 19 of The Aletheon is referred to as The Ruchira Dham Event 81 He wrote that it marked the definitive end of his active teaching work from now on he would simply transmit his state requiring devotees to become responsible for their reception of that He nonetheless continued to write books make art and give discourses but with an increased emphasis on what he called silent Darshan 40 96 In the last years of his life Adi Da began to exhibit his digital art and photography 40 96 Followers reported that he died of cardiac arrest on November 27 2008 at his home in Fiji while working on his art 1 82 Adi Da had four children three biological daughters with three different women and one adopted daughter 83 Teachings EditAdi Da s philosophical teachings can be summarized as The true nature of Reality is indivisible Conscious Light The sense of separate self is an illusion caused by our own activity of self contraction Transcending the illusion of an apparently separate self reveals our true identity as Conscious Light or Reality Itself Adi Da maintained that human beings are always demanding an explanation for the existence of the world or the bodily self There is a presumption that the world or the self is first People therefore seek to account for these first and then seek to understand the Divine on that basis To the dualistic point of view these presumptions are the fundamentally necessary starting point to all philosophical or metaphysical considerations 84 Conversely Adi Da affirmed that the proper beginning of philosophy or what he called the fundamental principle of Perfect Philosophy is the intrinsic apprehension of the egoless indivisible non separate and acausal nature of Reality or Conscious Light When this prior Reality is understood he said the need to account for the world or the body or the self disappears they are recognized as dualistic presumptions not primary realities from which Truth can then be found 84 Self contraction Edit According to Adi Da s teaching the human being s apparent inability to live as Conscious Light is a result of the illusion of separate self The ego the I with whom each individual identifies is not an entity or even an idea or a concept it is a chronic and total psycho physical Activity of self contraction locatable in feeling as a subtle but constant anxiety or stress and recognizable in all manifestations of reactive emotion 85 It is a mistaken identification with the limitations of the body mind mechanism necessarily implying differentiation of self from other beings or selves Self contraction is an unnecessary and unnatural limit placed on Energy or the Inherent Radiance of Transcendental Being which is always already perfectly free The act creates a consciousness apparently cut off from its primordial unity producing the self obsession and incessant seeking symbolised in the myth of Narcissus 86 An individual biography is generated from the movement of desire the constant effort to create a connection a flow of force between the contracted identity and everything from which it has differentiated itself 87 Efforts to reunite with the divine from the position of the separate self are necessarily futile because this self itself is a fundamental illusion The already present divine according to Adi Da can only be realized through releasing the contraction and transcending the illusion of separate self altogether Such transcendence he maintained is made possible through satsang the devotional relationship to the Spiritual Master or Satguru who transmits and communicates the Truth 88 89 85 Seventh stage realization Edit Adi Da developed a schema called the seven stages of life which he says is a precise mapping of the potential developmental course of human spiritual experience as it unfolds through the gross subtle and causal dimensions of the being Gross means made of material elements and refers to the physical body The subtle dimension which is senior to and which pervades the gross dimension consists of the etheric or personal life energy and includes the lower mental functions conscious mind subconscious mind and unconscious mind and higher mental functions discriminative mind and will The causal dimension is senior to both the subtle and the gross dimensions It is the root of attention or the essence of identity with the separate self or ego I 27 732 776 777 90 First Stage individuation physical development Second Stage socialization Third Stage integration mental development Fourth Stage spiritualization Divine Communion Fifth Stage spiritual ascent Sixth Stage abiding in consciousness Seventh Stage Divine Enlightenment awakening from all egoic limitations Adi Da categorized the fourth fifth and sixth stages of life as the highest respective stages of human development He characterized those who have reached these stages as saints yogis and sages including other religious figures such as Gautama Buddha and Jesus Christ 91 In Adi Da s schema the sixth stage or horizontal process is the exclusion of all awareness of the outside world in both its gross and subtle dimensions by secluding oneself within the heart in order to rest in the Divine Self or Consciousness Itself 91 733 735 As this is achieved by conditional means the conditional effort of exclusion it is non permanent 91 733 735 Relative to this spectrum Adi Da stated that while some yogis saints and sages had occasionally indicated some awareness of a seventh stage only he as a unique avatar had ever been born fully invested with the capability to fully embody it furthermore as the first Seventh Stage Adept only he would ever need to or be capable of doing so 92 He stated that the seventh stage has nothing to do with development and does not come after the sixth stage in a sequential manner Seventh stage Realization is a permanent natural state of open eyed ecstasy for which Adi Da employed the Sanskrit term Sahaj Samadhi or Seventh Stage Sahaja Nirvikalpa Samadhi 93 91 736 Adi Da claimed to be in the seventh stage of life most perfectly realized as Conscious Light Itself which is absolutely unconditional and is therefore permanent 91 736 Adi Da stated that since he solely embodied seventh stage realization the practice of devotional recognition response to him in conjunction with fundamental self understanding would henceforth be the exclusive means for others to most perfectly transcend self contraction thereby allowing them to participate in his enlightened state i e awaken to the seventh stage Realization 94 95 96 97 Adidam Edit Dome Temple at Da Love Ananda Mahal in Kauai Hawaii Temple at Adi Da Samrajashram in Naitauba Fiji Adidam refers to both the organization of Adi Da s devotees and the religion he taught The organization or church founded initially in 1972 went by many earlier names including the Dawn Horse Communion the Free Communion Church the Laughing Man Institute the Crazy Wisdom Fellowship the Way of Divine Ignorance and the Johannine Daist Communion 98 Adi Da s devotees recognize him to be a spiritual master who is the Avataric incarnation of the Bright or Conscious Light itself Many aspects of Adidam presuppose an Indian view of divinity accepting the concepts of karma reincarnation chakras etc It employs many Sanskrit terms and concepts God or the divine is seen as a principle and energy a consciousness that predates creation but is not a willful creator itself 40 98 99 Adidam was also suggested to have increasingly resembled the Hindu tradition of bhakti yoga 24 99 100 The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements noted that w hile acknowledging his debts to both Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism Adi Da asserted the originality of his own religious teaching 8 The practice of Adidam is defined by its emphasis on a devotional relationship to Adi Da whom followers see as an enlightened source of transcendental spiritual transmission capable of awakening others to seventh stage divine realization 40 93 Adi Da s followers often refer to him simply as Beloved 24 While devotion to Adi Da and the study of his teachings are the primary features of Adidam other specified practices are also prescribed including the study of other religious texts physical exercises regulation of sexuality and a raw vegan diet 24 101 In his book The Aletheon Adi Da described the mysterious appearance of the Avatar from his childhood in this way Something in the super physics of the universe makes it possible for the divine conscious light to avatarically incarnate as an apparent human individual for the purpose of bringing others into the sphere of divinely enlightened existence 102 Adi Da said that after his death there would not be any further teachings or revelations and that his message was complete 40 97 His artwork writings and the religious hermitages and sanctuaries empowered by his presence are to remain as expressions of his teaching and being He was emphatic that no individual assert themselves as his representative or heir 103 104 While the primary spiritual center of the church is Naitauba Island Fiji there are two officially designated ashrams or sanctuaries belonging to Adidam in the United States with another in Europe and another in New Zealand Followers of Adidam have been ambitious and prolific in their dissemination of Adi Da s books and teachings however the church is estimated to have remained more or less constant at approximately 1 000 members worldwide since 1974 with a high rate of turnover among membership 40 86 105 105 Works Edit Orpheus and Eurydice diptych 2008 Eurydice One The Illusory Fall of the Bicycle into The Sub Atomic Parallel Worlds of Primary Color and Point of View Part Three The Abstract Narrative in Geome and Linead Second Stage L 4 from Linead One 2007 2009 Lacquer on aluminum 96 x 198 x 5 inches Adi Da produced a variety of literary and creative works primarily the large number of books that he wrote The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements wrote that o n his passing Adi Da Samraj s personal charisma was collapsed into the charisma of the sacred books and the art and the theatrical works he left behind 8 Books Edit Main article Adi Da bibliography Cover of the 2007 edition of The Knee Of Listening Adi Da authored more than 75 books including those published posthumously with key works including his autobiography The Knee Of Listening spiritual works such as The Aletheon and The Dawn Horse Testament and literature such as The Orpheum 2 He wrote prolifically about his spiritual philosophy creating the Dawn Horse Press in 1973 to publish his books It continues to print many Adi Da authored titles 9 Best known among these is The Knee Of Listening 25 80 50 First published in 1972 it has been reissued in a number of editions undergoing extensive revisions and additions 106 The first edition was 271 pages long the latest is 840 40 106 The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements quoted a follower of Adi Da as saying The words of Adi Da Samraj as his devotees can confess carry a potency that is vastly beyond the verbal meaning a force that activates fundamental transformations in the being He invests himself spiritually in all of his writing and that transmission can be received through reading any of his books 8 The Aletheon in particular was described as o ne of his most important works on which he put the finishing touches the day he passed 8 Art Edit Adi Da graduated from Stanford University in 1963 24 7 86 88 25 80 2 His master s thesis a study of core issues in modernism focused on Gertrude Stein and the leading painters of the same period demonstrated his interest in art 26 In the last decade of his life Adi Da focused on creating works of art intended to enable viewers to enter into a space beyond limited points of view These works were primarily photographic and digitally produced large works of pigmented inks on paper or canvas and monumentally sized works of paint on aluminum He labeled his art Transcendental Realism He was invited to the 2007 Venice Biennale to participate through an official collateral exhibition and was later invited to exhibit his work in Florence Italy in the 15th century Cenacolo di Ognissanti and the Bargello Museum His work has also been shown in New York Los Angeles Amsterdam Miami and London Venice and Florence exhibitions Edit In 2007 Adi Da s works were included in an official collateral exhibition to the Venice Biennale in Italy The exhibition was curated by Italian art historian Achille Bonito Oliva 20 21 The exhibit then moved to Florence This solo exhibition in Florence was the first to show contemporary art with Renaissance art juxtaposing Domenico Ghirlandaio s perspectival Last Supper with Adi Da s aperspectival monumental fabrications 107 Reviews Edit The Spectra Suites a book of Adi Da s art has an introduction by American art historian and critic Donald Kuspit 108 Kuspit reviewed the work of Adi Da on several occasions writing It is a rare artist who can convey convincingly the sense of being face to face with the source of being Adi Da can clearly live in the depths without succumbing to their pressure bringing back pearls of art to prove it 109 What is perhaps most striking about Adi Da s photographs is their gnostic quality the intricate movement of light and shadow that gives them their expressive depth and profound intimacy It is more than a matter of standard chiaroscuro Adi Da is not simply employing the evocative power of light and shadow but bringing out their emblematic character Interweaving them and in numerous works skeins of light the fire of the sun play over and within shadowy if transparent water the water of life Adi Da suggests the union of opposites that is the core of mystical experience Ecstatic experience of their unity brings with it a sense of the immeasurable 110 His death at his home in Fiji occurred in his studio while working on his art 1 111 Reception EditCritique Edit Ken Wilber Edit From 1980 to 1990 philosophical theorist and author Ken Wilber wrote a number of enthusiastic endorsements and forewords for Adi Da s books including The Dawn Horse Testament The Divine Emergence of the World Teacher and Scientific Proof of the Existence of God Will Soon Be Announced by the White House 112 Wilber also recommended Adi Da as a spiritual teacher to those interested in his own writings Later Wilber alternated between praise and pointed criticism 113 114 115 In his last public statement concerning Adi Da he wrote I affirm all of the extremes of my statements about Da he is one of the greatest spiritual Realizers of all time in my opinion and yet other aspects of his personality lag far behind those extraordinary heights By all means look to him for utterly profound revelations unequaled in many ways yet step into his community at your own risk 116 Others Edit In 1982 yoga and religion scholar Georg Feuerstein formally became a follower of Adi Da and wrote a number of introductions to Adi Da books He later renounced this affiliation becoming publicly critical of Adi Da and the community surrounding him in Fiji Feuerstein devoted a chapter to Adi Da in his 1991 book Holy Madness Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers and Enlightenment 15 ch 4 In the introduction to the 2006 edition Feuerstein describes having edited the sections devoted to Adi Da to reflect these changes in opinion 117 Asian Religions scholar Scott Lowe was an early follower of Adi Da and lived in the community in 1974 In an essay later analyzing what he had witnessed as well as Adi Da s subsequent career he perceives a pattern of abusive manipulative and self centered behavior saying does it necessarily follow that the individual who is liberated is free to indulge in what appear to be egocentric hurtful and damaging actions in the name of spiritual freedom I personally think not while acknowledging the subtlety and complexity of the ongoing debate 118 119 Lowe and others have also criticized Adi Da s claims toward the exclusivity of his realization In part critics point to his earlier message strongly rejecting the necessity for any religious authority or belief due to enlightenment being every individual s natural condition 13 40 98 99 120 Adi Da heavily edited subsequent editions of his books for which they have been criticized as auto hagiography and self mythology 106 121 122 University of Southern California religion professor Robert Ellwood wrote Accounts of life with Adi Da in his close knit spiritual community describe extremes of asceticism and indulgence of authoritarianism and antinomianism Supporters of the alleged avatar rationalize such eccentricities as shock therapy for the sake of enlightenment 123 124 Controversies Edit In 1985 accusations of misbehavior by Adi Da and some of his followers attracted media attention 16 125 Adi Da and Adidam then known as Da Free John and The Johannine Daist Communion were subjects of almost daily coverage in April of that year in the San Francisco Chronicle San Francisco Examiner Mill Valley Record and other regional media resources 24 The story gained national attention with a two part expose on The Today Show that aired May 9 and 10 126 In investigative reports and interviews some ex members made numerous specific allegations of Adi Da forcing members to engage in psychologically sexually and physically abusive and humiliating behavior as well as accusing the church of committing tax fraud Others stated that they never witnessed or were involved in any such activities 127 128 129 123 130 131 None of these accusations were substantiated in a court of law The church issued conflicting statements in response to the coverage A lawyer for the church said that controversial sexual activities had only occurred during the Garbage and Goddess period years earlier Shortly after an official church spokesman said that tantra style encounters of the kind described in allegations were still occurring but were mostly confined to an inner circle 132 This confirmed the stories by former members that such activities had continued up to the time of the lawsuits and interviews in 1985 133 134 135 The church said that no illegal acts had taken place and that the movement had a right to continue experiments in lifestyles 136 137 Two lawsuits were filed against Adi Da and his organization in 1985 The first was brought by Beverly O Mahoney then wife of the Adidam president alleging fraud and assault among other things the suit sought 5 million in damages 18 Adidam threatened to file its own lawsuit against O Mahoney as well as five others who had been named in stories and interviews making allegations of abuse no suit was ever filed Adidam charged that allegations against the church were part of an extortion plot 138 The O Mahoney suit was dismissed by the court the next year 139 The other lawsuit and two threatened suits in the mid 1980s were settled with payments and confidentiality agreements 140 negatively impacting member morale 137 141 142 Since the mid 1980s no lawsuits have been filed against Adi Da or any Adidam organizations Jeffrey J Kripal assessed the charges against Adi Da in the broader context of sexually active gurus teachers and Eastern tantric traditions altogether He noted that although many sects experienced scandals due to sexual escapades collapsing false fronts of celibacy which contrasted with Adidam s open period of sexual experimentation 143 Kripal further wrote In this historical American Asian context it is hardly surprising that serious ethical charges involving sexual abuse and authoritarian manipulation have been leveled at Adi Da and his community for very similar if far more open and acknowledged antinomian practices and ideas Bay Area journalistic reports from a single month in 1985 are especially salacious and any full treatment of the erotic within Adidam would need to spend dozens of careful pages analyzing both the accuracy of the reports and the community s interpretation and understanding of the same events the latter framed largely in the logic of crazy wisdom that is the notion that the enlightened master can employ antinomian shock tactics that appear to be immoral or abusive in order to push his disciples into new forms of awareness and freedom Perhaps what is most remarkable about the case of Adidam is the simple fact that the community has never denied the most basic substance of the charges that is that sexual experimentation was indeed used in the ashrams and that some people experienced these as abusive particularly in the Garbage and the Goddess Period even if it has also differed consistently and strongly on their proper interpretation and meaning 4 Endorsements Edit In a foreword to the 2004 edition of Adi Da s autobiography The Knee Of Listening religious scholar Jeffrey J Kripal described Adi Da s total corpus as being the most doctrinally thorough the most philosophically sophisticated the most culturally challenging and the most creatively original literature currently available in the English language 144 145 146 Physician and homeopath Gabriel Cousens wrote an endorsement for Adi Da s biography The Promised God Man Is Here saying it has deepened my experience of Him as the Divine Gift established in the cosmic domain 147 He also mentions Adi Da in his books Spiritual Nutrition and Tachyon Energy 148 149 Psychiatrist Elisabeth Kubler Ross wrote an endorsement for Adi Da s book Easy Death referring to it as a masterpiece 150 Philosopher Henry Leroy Finch Jr wrote that i f there is a man today who is God illumined that man is Avatar Adi Da Samraj There exists nowhere in the world among Christians Jews Muslims Hindus Buddhists or any other groups anyone who has so much to teach Avatar Adi Da is a force to be reckoned with a Pole around which the world can get its bearings 151 See also EditAdvaita Vedanta Nondualism AvatarNotes Edit a b c d e Spiritual leader passes on www fijitimes com November 28 2008 Archived from the original on February 26 2009 Retrieved February 20 2010 a b c d e Obituaries Columbia College Today June 2009 Retrieved August 12 2020 An Introduction to Avatar Adi Da www adidam org Retrieved February 20 2010 a b c d e f g Forsthoefel Thomas A Humes Cynthia Ann 2005 Gurus in America Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 6573 X Chryssides George D 2006 The A to Z of New Religious Movements Lanham MD Scarecrow Press pp 47 48 200 ISBN 0 8108 5588 7 Daniels Burton November 2002 The Integration of Psyche and Spirit Volume I The Structural Model Writer s Showcase Press p 226 ISBN 0 595 24181 6 a b c d Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Five Volumes Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 0 275 98712 4 a b c d e f Eugene V Gallagher New Religious Movements and Scripture in James R Lewis and Inga B Tollefsen eds The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements Volume II Oxford University Press 2016 p 377 a b The Dawn Horse www dawnhorsepress com Retrieved February 20 2010 Jones Franklin 1973 The Knee Of Listening Second Edition Dawn Horse Press ASIN B000JDNOWO Kripal Jeffery J 2004 The Knee Of Listening foreword to the 2004 edition Dawn Horse Press ISBN 1 57097 167 6 Mei Ling Israel Primal Views Root Shape and Root Color The World As Light published online in Respiro org a b Wilber Ken October 11 1996 The Case of Adi Da wilber shambhala com Archived from the original on April 9 2010 Retrieved February 24 2010 Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV Westport CT Greenwood Press p 93 ISBN 0 275 98712 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l Feuerstein Georg 1996 Holy Madness The Dangerous and Disillusioning Example of Da Free John What is Enlightenment Spring Summer 1996 9 ISSN 1080 3432 a b c Lowe Scott Lane David 1996 DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones Mt San Antonio College Philosophy Group ISBN 1 56543 054 9 Duke Lynne June 12 2005 Deep Throat s Daughter The Kindred Free Spirit The Washington Post a b Sex Slave Sues Guru Pacific Isle Orgies Charged San Francisco Chronicle April 4 1985 Collin Molly April 17 1985 Da Free John Sect Sues 6 Ex Members On Extortion Charge Mill Valley Record a b Venice Biennale Collateral Exhibition Adi Da Samraj www huma3 com July 11 2007 Retrieved February 23 2010 a b Storr Robert 2007 La Biennale di Venezia 52 Esposizione internazionale d arte Volume 2 Rizzoli pp 312 337 ISBN 978 0 8478 3001 5 Lowe Ed The House Where Swami Lived Long Island Newsday Magazine September 14 1986 a b c d James R Lewis The Encyclopedia of Cults Sects and New Religions Prometheus Books 2001 p 32 34 a b c d e f g h i j North Coast Journal Humboldt County CA Cover story Jan 14 1999 Northcoastjournal com Retrieved June 1 2010 a b c d e Feuerstein Georg Holy Madness 1st ed Arkana 1992 a b Adi Da Samraj Eleutherios The Only Truth That Sets The Heart Free May 14 2006 p 87 a b c d e f g h Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening Ashram 1972 Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening The Life and Understanding of Franklin Jones 1972 chapter 4 He had some raw peyote and we decided to take the drug although neither of us had any idea what its effects would be In the past months I had used marijuana a few times and found it very enjoyable and relaxing And so I willingly accepted a chance for some kind of very powerful high Adi Da The Knee Of Listening Middletown CA Dawn Horse Press 1995 p 168 Gourley Edmiston Adidam Comes to the North Coast North Coast Journal Weekly Jan 14 1999 Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening 1972 chapter 8 By the spring of 1965 I had begun to use marijuana frequently I found it relaxing and particularly necessary under the pressure of work and effort that Rudi required But the drug began to have a peculiarly negative effect I would realize a profound anxiety and fear I took other drugs with my old friends We took Romilar cough syrup again but now its effects seemed minor I took a drug called DMT which had a remarkable and miraculous effect Such remarkable states of awareness combined with my rising sense of anxiety fear and reluctance in relation to drugs so that finally in the early summer of 1965 I determined somehow to stop their use Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening 1972 chapter 4 I voluntarily submitted to drug trials at the V A hospital in Fountain View California At the V A hospital I was given a dose of drugs one day per week I was told that I would be given mescalin LSD or psilocybin at three separate sessions and during a fourth session some combination of these There were also various bizarre experiences and periods of anxiety I suffered anxiety attacks and occasional nervousness for perhaps a year beyond the actual tests Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV p 88 Jones discovered that his psychedelic drug experiences sometimes mimicked the ecstatic states he had known in childhood and was now desperate to recapture Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV p 88 Jones Knee Ashram 1972 p 22 23 After my experiences at the VA hospital I went into a period of relative seclusion Nina worked as a schoolteacher and supported our living Patterson W P The Gurdjieff Journal Gurdjieff amp The New Age Part IX Franklin Jones amp Rudi Part I Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening Ashram 1972 p 35 I saw pictures of a store with oriental sculpture in New York Swami Rudrananda Rudi Spiritual Cannibalism Links Books New York 1973 First Edition page needed Historical dictionary of New Age movements by Michael York The Rowman Litterfield Publishing Group 2004 pp 11 12 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV Jones Knee 1972 chapter 8 Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening p 62 Gallagher New and Alternative Religions in America p 89 Jones himself describes this event as apparent evidence of a clinical breakdown Godman David 1985 Be As You Are The Teachings of Sri Ramana Maharshi England Arkana p 4 Franklin The Knee Of Listening 1972 chapter 9 Jones The Knee Of Listening 1972 ed p 192 Jones Franklin The Knee Of Listening Ashram 1972 p 84 I spent that year working for Scientology Rawlinson Andrew Book of Enlightened Masters Western Teachers in Eastern Traditions Open Court 1997 ISBN 0 8126 9310 8 page 222 Rawlinson Andrew Book of Enlightened Masters Western Teachers in Eastern Traditions Open Court 1997 ISBN 0 8126 9310 8 page 222 a b Gordon Baumann Religions of The World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices Volume 1 ABC CLIO Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 57607 223 1 page 3 In his autobiography he asserts that he was born in a state of perfect awareness Jones spent his college and subsequent years in a spiritual quest Feuerstein Georg 2006 Holy Madness Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers And Enlightenment Hohm Press ISBN 1 890772 54 2 Peter J Columbus The Relevance of Alan Watts in Contemporary Culture 2021 p 98 Bob Larson Larson s Book of World Religions and Alternative Spirituality 2004 p 137 Adi Da capitalized terms that he felt expressed the divine a b Kripal Jeffrey J 2014 Comparing Religions 1st Edition Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 40518 458 8 Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol V Westport CT Greenwood Press p 85 ISBN 0 275 98712 4 began to attract a small following Lattin Don April 5 1985 Hypnotic Da Free John Svengali of the truth seeking set San Francisco Examiner a b The Gurdjieff Journal Gurdjieff amp The New Age Part IX Franklin Jones amp Rudi Part I by William Patrick Patterson Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV pp 85 86 Lowe Scott and Lane David 1996 DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones Mt San Antonio College Philosophy Group In his evening talks Da Free John frequently referred to Muktananda as a black magician Muktananda spoke of his former student in similar terms Feuerstein Holy Madness p 83 Jones believed that his guru was settling for less than the ultimate while Muk dismissed Jones arguments as pretentious a breach between them opened that never formally healed Jones continued to criticize Muk in talks and publications while at the same time acknowledging his debt Gourley Edmiston Adidam Comes to the North Coast North Coast Journal Weekly Jan 14 1999 The Yoga Tradition Its History Literature Philosophy and Practice By Georg Feuerstein p 25 Feuerstein Holy Madness 1992 p 84 students experienced visions spontaneous body movements known as kriyas bliss states heart openings kundalini arousals and several were apparently drawn into the mystical unitive state or even into temporary sahaja samadhi Feuerstein Holy Madness 1992 p 84 Feuerstein 1992 pp 266 267 Due to the controversial nature of material in the book almost immediately at the behest of Da Love Ananda every effort was made to retrieve all existing copies Butler Katy Sex Practices Did Not Cease Marin Cult Officials Admit San Francisco Chronicle April 9 1985 Feuerstein Holy Madness p 86 87 Bubba Free John Garbage and the Goddess Lower Lake CA Dawn Horse Press 1974 pp 16 31 Gurdjieff Journal In particular Bubba attacked the cult of pairs and notions of marriage in particular which he said only serves the seeking and separateness which at root are the denial of the Divinity of the simple here and now Bubba first told them The instant you marry you must discard it Otherwise marriage is another cultic form a sex contract in which you become medievally involved with personality forms making yourself strategically unavailable to the rest of life and again mutually create the sensation of separate existence including poor me or fantastic me The cult of marriage is a principal obstacle in the affair of the spiritual Community Bubba then broke up couples and marriages and began what was called the sexual theater that of switching partners instituting orgies and making pornographic movies Free John Bubba Garbage and the Goddess the last Miracles and Final Spiritual Instructions of Bubba Free John DHP 1974 p 13 This is what the spiritual life is all about nothing conventional survives Feuerstein Holy Madness 2006 p 157 Michael Anthony Costabile Sexual Practice Spiritual Awakening and Divine Self Realization in the Reality Way of Adidam in Henrik Bogdan and James R Lewis Sexuality and New Religious Movements PSNRAS Springer 2014 Feuerstein Georg and Feuerstein Patricia Remembrance Of The Divine Names of Da 1982 ISBN 0 913922 72 2 Leydecker Mary Suit Shatters Calm for Sect Members Marin Independent Journal April 5 1985 a b The Eternal Stand complied and narrated by Jonathan Condit Dawn Horse Press 2014 p 16 17 31 44 365 Feuerstein Georg 2006 Holy Madness Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers An Enlightenment Hohm Press ISBN 1 890772 54 2 pp 166 167 In a talk given at the end of February 1986 he explained that on that eventful morning he had spoken to his close devotees of his grief sorrow and frustration at the seeming futility of his teaching work He had told them that he could no longer endure their rejection and abuse and that he wished to die quickly Feuerstein Georg 2006 Holy Madness Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers And Enlightenment Hohm Press ISBN 1 890772 54 2 p 166 167 He explained that most enlightened beings incarnate only partially into the body Adi Da said that in this event he descended fully into the body becoming utterly human it was sufficient for disciples to simply meditate upon him to participate in his enlightened state Carolyn Lee The Avatar of What Is The Dawn Horse Press 2007 2017 p 85 87 89 90 95 Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV p 95 Carolyn Lee The Avatar of What Is The Dawn Horse Press 2007 2017 p 112 118 Lake County News California Followers mourn death of spiritual leader Archived from the original on June 27 2009 Retrieved June 2 2010 Feuerstein 2006 p 169 a b The Aletheon vol 7 2009 p 1888 91 a b The Dawn Horse Testament 1985 p 116 117 Gallagher Eugene Ashcraft Michael 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Volume V p 98 Avabhasa Da 1992 The Method of the Siddhas California The Dawn Horse Press p 25 Gallagher Eugene Ashcraft Michael 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Volume V p 97 98 The Method of the Siddhas 1992 p 195 Eugene V Gallagher W Michael Ashcraft Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Five Volumes Greenwood Press 2006 p 99 ISBN 0 275 98712 4 a b c d e Samraj Adi Da The Knee Of Listening I Alone Am The Adidam Revelation 2004 Dawn Horse Press ISBN 1 57097 167 6 Samraj 2005b p 93 Gallagher New Religions p 100 Samraj Adi Da Eleutherios Dawn Horse Press 2006 p 456 I Am the First and the Only One to Realize and to Demonstrate seventh stage Realization which now and forever hereafter I Alone and Uniquely Reveal and Transmit to all my formally practicing true devotees and thus potentially to all beings Feuerstein Georg 2006 Holy Madness p 167 it was sufficient for disciples to simply meditate upon him to participate in his enlightened state Gallagher Ashcraft Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America p 99 George D Chryssides The A to Z of New Religious Movements Rowan Litterfield Publishing Group 2001 p 47 Reilly Gary How Franklin Jones Became the Master The Mill Valley Record April 3 1985 Gallagher The New Religious Movements Experience in America p 98 99 Feuerstein 1992 p 98 America 2004 Page 118 Adi Da Samraj The Aletheon The Dawn Horse Press 2009 Samraj Adi Da The Orders of My True and Free Renunciate Devotees Dawn Horse Press 2007 pg 110 all those who truly devotionally recognize Avatar Adi Da serve as instruments of His Blessing Regard in the world Gallagher The New Religious Movements Experience in America p 97 Feuerstein 1992 p 93 He has a flair for drama and it has been successful in keeping the attention of some for years but it evidently is not a way that holds an attraction for larger numbers of spiritually motivated people a b Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV p 106 Jones significantly modified later editions of Knee in later editions Jones childhood is presented as utterly exceptional It is clear that Jones autobiography might best be understood as a kind of auto hagiography since its purpose is to preserve for posterity a sanitized mythologized and highly selective account of Jones life and spiritual adventures Gary Coates The Rebirth of Sacred Art Reflections on the Aperspectival 2013 p 8 Welcome Books 2007 pp 1 11 Donald Kuspit in The World As Light An Introduction to the Art of Adi Da Samraj by Mei Ling Israel Dawn Horse Press 2007 Donald Kuspit The Female Nude in the Art of Adi Da in Louis Stern Fine Arts gallery The Quandra Loka Suite 52 Views by Adi Da Samraj Archived copy Archived from the original on June 27 2009 Retrieved June 2 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wilber Ken 1985 Review of Adi Da s The Dawn Horse Testament www adidawilber com The Case of Adi Da Archived 2008 02 13 at the Wayback Machine Ken Wilber Online October 11 1996 Ken Wilber Ken 1997 Private letter to the Adidam community www adidawilber com Ken Wilber Online An Update on the Case of Adi Da Wilber shambhala com August 28 1998 Archived from the original on March 27 2010 Retrieved June 1 2010 An Update on the Case of Adi Da Archived March 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Ken Wilber Online August 28 1998 Feuerstein 2006 intro chapter 4 Lowe Scott and Lane David 1996 DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones Mt San Antonio College Philosophy Group The Strange Case Of Franklin Jones Lightgate net Archived from the original on January 8 2010 Retrieved June 1 2010 Lowe Scott and Lane David 1996 DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones Mt San Antonio College Philosophy Group p 23 Feuerstein 1992 pp 83 96 the original published version has the ring of authenticity and can be appreciated as a remarkable mystical document Later editions regrettably tend toward mythologization Da The Strange Case of Franklin Jones by Scott Lowe and David Lane Walnut CA Mt San Antonio College 1996 a b Molly Colin Peter Seidman and Tony Lewis Defectors voice several charges Mill Valley Record April 3 1985 Ellwood Robert 1997 Nova Religio book review of DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones October 1997 Vol 1 No 1 Pages 153 153 Molly Colin Peter Seidman and Tony Lewis Defectors voice several charges Mill Valley Record April 3 1985 NBC Today Show May 9 1985 Feuerstein Georg 1996 Holy Madness The Dangerous and Disillusioning Example of Da Free John What Is Enlightenment Issue 9 Seidman Peter Sexual experiments continued after 76 JDC officiaIs admit Mill Valley Record April 10 1985 Butler Katy Sex Practices Did Not Cease Marin Cult Officials Admit San Francisco Chronicle April 9 1985 Neary Walt Inner Circle Privy to Parties Lake County Record Bee April 12 1985 Sex Slave Sues Guru Pacific Isle Orgies Charged San Francisco Chronicle April 4 1985 Feuerstein Holy Madness Arkana 1992 p 90 sexual experiments were for the most part confined to an inner circle But occasionally some relative newcomers were included This happened to one couple in 1982 who provide this fascinating extensive account p 92 Tantra style encounters of this kind occurred periodically and more or less secretly until at least the end of 1985 and led to legal difficulties The San Francisco Chronicle April 9 1985 Channel 2 News San Francisco March 1985 Seidman Peter Sexual experiments continued after 76 JDC officials admit Mill Valley Record April 10 1985 The Mill Valley Record April 10 1985 a b Gourley Scott R Edmiston Rosemary January 14 1999 Adidam Comes to the Northcoast North Coast Journal Humboldt County CA Molly Colin Da Free John Sect Sues 6 Ex Members On Extortion Charge The Mill Valley Record April 17 1985 Wildermuth John Sex Guru Touts Celibacy The San Francisco Chronicle June 16th 1986 noting that a Marin County judge ruled that O Mahony had no legal basis for bringing the lawsuit Deep Throat s Daughter The Kindred Free Spirit Washington Post June 12 2005 The lawsuits and threatened suits that dogged the group in the mid 1980s were settled with payments and confidentiality agreements says a California lawyer Ford Greene who handled three such cases Gallagher Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol IV p 93 Feuerstein Holy Madness Arkana 1992 p 267 268 Over the years Jones has been sued several times by disaffected students although institutional representatives have so far succeeded in keeping him out of court Cases were settled by arbitration which bled the church financially Jeffrey J Kripal Riding the Dawn Horse Adi Da and the Eros of Nonduality in Thomas Forsthoefel and Cynthia Ann Humes eds Gurus In America SUNY Press 2005 p 199 Jeffrey J Kripal Introduction in Radical Transcendentalism 2007 Samraj Adi Da 2004 Foreword The Knee Of Listening p xiv Foreword 2 Beyond Social Ego Kneeoflistening com November 2 2003 Archived from the original on July 13 2011 Retrieved June 1 2010 The Ruchira Sannyasin Order of Adidam Ruchiradam March 3 2003 Adi Da The Promised God Man Is Here Dawn Horse Press ISBN 1 57097 143 9 Cousens Gabriel 2005 Spiritual Nutrition Six Foundations for Spiritual Life and the Awakening of Kundalini North Atlantic Books p 193 ISBN 978 1 55643 499 0 Cousens Gabriel 2005 Tachyon Energy A New Paradigm in Holistic Healing North Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 55643 310 8 Easy Death Spiritual Wisdom on the Ultimate Dawn Horse Press August 31 2005 ISBN 1 57097 202 8 Henry Leroy Finch Jr Introduction in Ruchira Avatara Gita The Way of the Divine Heart Master The Five Books of the Heart of the Adidam Revelation 1998 References EditChryssides George 2001 The A to Z of New Religious Movements The Rowman Litterfield Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8108 5588 5 Cousens Gabriel 2005 Spiritual Nutrition Six Foundations for Spiritual Life and the Awakening of Kundalini North Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 55643 499 0 Crowley Paul 2005 Rahner beyond Rahner A Great Theologian Encounters the Pacific Rim Rowman amp Litterfield ISBN Number 074254964X Daniels Burton 2002 The Integration of Psyche and Spirit Volume I The Structural Model iUniverse ISBN 0 595 24181 6 Ellwood Robert 1997 Nova Religio book review of DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones October 1997 Vol 1 No 1 Pages 153 153 Feuerstein Georg 1992 Holy Madness Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers And Enlightenment Penguin ISBN 0 14 019370 7 Feuerstein Georg 2006 Holy Madness Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers And Enlightenment Rev Exp edition Hohm Press ISBN 1 890772 54 2 Forsthoefel Thomas A amp Humes Cynthia Ann 2005 Gurus in America SUNY Series in Hindu Studies State University of New York Press ISBN 9781423748687 Gallagher Eugene amp Ashcraft Michael 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Five Volumes Greenwood Press ISBN 0 275 98712 4 Gordon Melton Gale J 1999 Religious Leaders of America A Biographical Guide to Founders and Leaders 2nd Revised edition Gale Research Company ISBN 0 8103 8878 2 Melton Gordon amp Baumann Martin 2002 Religions of The World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices Volume 1 ABC CLIO Ltd ISBN 1 57607 223 1 Jones Franklin 1972 The Knee Of Listening CSA Press ISBN 978 0 87707 093 1 Kripal Jeffrey J 2004 Foreword to The Knee Of Listening Dawn Horse Press ISBN 1 57097 167 6 Kripal Jeffrey J 2014 Comparing Religions 1st Edition Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 40518 458 8 Lewis James R 2001 Odd Gods New Religions and the Cult Controversy Book Prometheus Books ISBN 1 57392 842 9 Lowe Scott amp Lane David 1996 DA The Strange Case of Franklin Jones Mt San Antonio College Philosophy Group Rawlinson Andrew Book of Enlightened Masters Western Teachers in Eastern Traditions Open Court 1997 ISBN 0 8126 9310 8 York Michael 2004 Historical Dictionary of New Age Movements The Rowman Litterfield Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8108 4873 3External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Adi Da Adidam org Official Adidam website AdiDaControversies org Adidam website addressing controversies about Adi Da Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adi Da amp oldid 1129162610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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