Monk and the Zorba
Osho Resort Among 10 Best Meditation Retreats in India
Osho Meditation Resort, Pune (shown second)
If you’re looking for a quiet corner of the world to relax and reflect, plan a trip to the famous gardens at Osho Meditation Resort. The 28-acre campus is located a short flight from Mumbai in Koregaon Park, Pune. The resort offers a mix of a traditional ashram experience and a luxury getaway, with meditation classes, lush gardens, swimming pool, marble pathways and tropical foliage. Elle Magazine called the center “a very comfortable paradise where you can stay a long time.” Single occupancy guesthouse rooms start at $55/night.
www.huffingtonpost.com
Credit to Max
Indian Spiritual Leaders Visit Atlanta
Indian spiritual leaders visit Atlanta
by Caroline Young
March 27, 2013 03:45 PM
The concept of meditation has been around for thousands of years in the Eastern world and is spreading rampantly throughout the West.
Frustration, stress and anger are a few things a regular meditation practice can help to release, according to Swami Vedant, also known as Vasant Joshi, PhD.
He is a disciple of Osho, a spiritual teacher and guru who died in 1990.Joshi, of India, travels the world guiding people through Osho meditations and spreading Osho’s beliefs and techniques.
He also said people also start to let go of drug, alcohol and smoking habits after developing a meditation practice.
“Many peoples’ lives change in such a way they cannot believe how they could have lived that unconscious, unaware life for so many years,” Joshi said. “They are able to connect and relate with people better. They’re more compassionate, more alive and respect life much better.”
He is currently in Atlanta until June, when he will continue traveling around the states for several months. Joshi hosts three- to four-day meditation retreats, as well as smaller sessions in various locations (www.meetup.com/oshomeditationatlanta). Osho meditation is also offered in yoga studios throughout Atlanta.
For Joshi, his first experiences with Osho meditation in 1975 brought him a “tremendous amount of clarity” and a “life-transforming vision.”
“I see life in a very different light. I learned to enjoy life, not to carry the same burden of the past,” he said.
Joshi described meditation sessions as a gathering of friends to have fun and be aware of all three levels of being; the body, thoughts and emotions.
“Then one begins to experience our consciousness. We are conscious but we don’t do things consciously,” he said. “Another message is we have to respect this life. This life is precious.”
Joshi said Osho believed in one humanity and one consciousness, and his teachings help erase divisions among people created by the mind.
“We have to remove the dichotomy, the split between mind and body and consciousness. They’re all connected,” he said. “We are not here to convert anyone or convince anyone. We are simply saying, ‘Something has worked with us. Maybe it will work for you.’”
Joshi said he tells his practitioners, or “seekers,” to choose one of Osho’s 300 “active” meditation techniques, which includes breathing, catharsis — which can be dancing, crying, laughing jumping or shouting — and seated meditation.
“You have to go inside and look what you’re carrying inside. We are carrying emotions like anger and jealously,” he said. “We silently watch what is going on inside and [learn] how you can deal with [it].”
Additionally, the international nonprofit Isha Foundation, non-religious and volunteer-run, has made a presence in Atlanta. It was established by internationally known yogi Sadhguru Vasudev, whose focus is to cultivate human well being with a holistic approach, said Leslie Crespi, Isha Atlanta media outreach coordinator.
She said there are two arms to the organization, including yoga and Isha Kriya meditation offerings, as well as social outreach projects worldwide. So far, the U.S. has about 35 cities with city centers, including health care facilities, libraries and churches, with free introduction Isha Kriya meditation sessions.
“It’s an opportunity to come and meditate with other people of like mind, and to get questions answered,” Crespi said.
One-hour sessions are hosted Mondays at the Northside Branch Library from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m., and there will be a guided meditation session April 4 at the Phoenix and Dragon Bookstore in Sandy Springs, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Crespi said Isha Kriya meditation involves 12 to 18 minutes of focused time “going internal.”
“People will experience a sense of peacefulness. It can enhance health. … Your heart rate goes down,” she said. “People report more mental clarity and focus.”
Personally, Crespi said she stopped getting sick consistently, was more productive at work and had a significant energy boost after she started meditating and doing yoga nine years ago.
“It’s overall, a sort of blissfulness and joy,” she said. “Little things don’t bother me. … I am less reactive and much more thoughtful and aware, versus responding out of emotion.”
Vasudev will be speaking at Emory University in DeKalb County April 14 at 5 p.m., as part of the Sheth Series, where key global leaders are often asked to come and address key issues in economy, politics, and leadership.
“The focus is on inner management and wellbeing for people who lead people,” Crespi said.
He will also be at the Georgia International Convention Center in College Park April 19 through 21 for a three-day event, Inner Engineering, which will include guided meditations, yoga, discussions with Vasudev about human consciousness and nutrition, and there will also be vegetarian meals served both days.
Article in Neighbour Newspapers: neighbornewspapers.com
Links: oshoatlanta.com – innerengineering.com
Soaps and Spice
When the people at Itmenaan Estate in Almora, Uttarakhand, told me about a soap Factory near the Chitai Temple, I expected a dim, boring place with machines clanking away and the overpowering smell of floral extracts hanging in the air. Turns out, the SOS Organics factory (which stands for Sharing Organic Standards) is a quaint structure with a little revolving gate and creepers climbing its walls and the Himalayas in the distance. And it isn’t just a soap factory either, it’s also a natural cosmetics and organic health food company, run by Bangalore-based Amrita Chengappa and Germany-based Santosh Thomas.
The four-year-old factory, hidden from view from the main road, is based on an environmentally sustainable project through which they try to preserve the natural resources of the hills as well as the local Kumaoni culture. Santosh believes that by providing employment opportunities right here, the locals need not move to cities in search of livelihood. Amrita looks after the marketing, while Santosh researches local millet, which he calls a superfood, and then processes and packs it to be sold all over the country. Take a free tour of the factory and you’ll be greeted by giggling groups of local girls who make candles, soaps and creams by hand and wrap them in colourful paper before piling them up in cartons to be delivered to select hotels and stores across India.
The popularity of the products is growing, but the duo doesn’t want to increase the production because that will only mean ruining the quietude of the area. The women at their factory, too, can only work from 9am to 5pm, as they have families to look after. It’s an easy pace of working, and they want to keep it that way.
You can learn more about the products and buy them on sosorganics.in
Article by Hardika Panchal, Lonely Planet Magazine India
In Spirituality
Her outlook towards life is mystical. She dwells only in the present and cherishes each moment with a smile on her face. Pratiksha, as her name suggests, happily embraces the surprises life unfolds.
Artist Pratiksha Apurv, niece and disciple of Osho, embraced spiritual living at the age of 11. “The atmosphere at home was very different…I had grown up listening to Osho’s discourses early on. I started meditating when I was only seven. It was bound to leave an impact on me, even as a child,” smiles Pratiksha, insisting that she isn’t looking for a different identity of her own and that having been known as Osho’s disciple or niece has been her biggest blessing.
With an inborn talent for creativity, the lady took up fashion designing in 1987. Under the label Oshonik, she went on to design attires for eminent personalities such as Atal Behari Vajpayee, Vinod Khanna, Amjad Ali Khan, Hansraj Hans, Kapil Dev, Zakir Hussain and the likes. But, Pratiksha didn’t find her solave in the tiresome toil. “I was only living the outer journey. I wasn’t spending enough time with myself…my inner journey had ceased,” she says. Yes, it was a flourishing profession, but, finding her peace was foremost important for the 49-year-old based in New Delhi.
She then took to painting, a skill she had always possessed. She netted a distinguished name for herself, of that of a spiritual painter, in the art world. Insisting that she always paints with a preconceived visual, majorly inspired by the teachings of Osho, Pratiksha who has also painted shlokas from the Upanishads, says, “I never paint without visualising. The concept is clear to the extent that I am precisely particular even about the size of the canvas.”
Over the many eventful years, Pratiksha has travelled and exhibited her solo works across the world. And her works, intricate reflections of pious teachings, are not mere paintings, she says. “Time and again, people have told me that my paintings spread positive energies… The ambience and the energies that surround me when I paint get absorbed in my work, I believe.”
The artist will exhibit works from her collection – Spiritual Odyssey and Reflections – in Chandigarh from April 8 to 14, at Punjab Kala Bhawan, Sector 16.
Sharing that people spend their lives worrying about unnecessary things, she says, “If people spend at least an hour meditating each day, the world will be a better place to live in. that one hour helps you improve the quality of your life, keep a balance between money and peace of mind; this is what Osho teaches.”
Abiding by Osho’s teachings, the lady, along with as many as 25 lakh disciples, vowed not to have children. “That was in the ‘70s. The world was witnessing over-population and Osho felt that one generation of people must not produce children. I felt that I should do my bit for the world,” she concludes.
by Mabel Disket
Download another article
on Pratiksha and her forthcoming exhibition
in ‘Identity’: Painter Perfect (PDF)
Bhuri Bai: Nathdwara’s Hidden Gem
In the dusty streets of Nathdwara where Jai Shri Krishna chants can be overheard with astonishing regularity, there stands a small house tucked away in a corner just round the main temple complex.
Here lived, not too far back in time, a sadhvi who though illiterate was considered a polar star of the Vedantic philosophy. Her name was Bhuri Bai.
Born into a carpenter family in the late 19th century, she was wedded tenderly at 13 to a rich painter aged 43! While the match seems startling today, it was not so utterly peculiar a few decades back.
As fate might have it, she was widowed within 12 years of marriage and later ill treated by her in-laws. On the intervention of the royal family of Sheorati, Mewar, she was offered separate residence of her own – the one where she lived all her life, flowered into a saint and died, leaving behind a huge vacuum for her ardent disciples. The place, now a residence cum ashram, is the one I visited recently, almost by accident.
Left all alone so young, Bhuri Bai turned to God. While no one knows how she acquired so much mystical knowledge, there are several theories including that she was initiated into Yoga by a wandering female Muslim sage. Whatever may have been the reason for her elevation, the fact is that Bhuri Bai climbed the spiritual ladder to rarest of heights and there are tales galore of her extraordinary feats.
Once a wondering mendicant came to sexually exploit this young woman whom he learnt lived alone. But on gaining one vision of hers, he is believed to have fallen prostrate at her feet, seeking her forgiveness and mercy. He later stayed with her for the rest of his life as one of her best disciples.
Another time when a cow died soon after giving birth, Bhuri Bai begged God to find a way to save the life of the new born. Miraculously, Bhuri Bai had a metaphysical experience and she started lactating and herself fed the calf till it grew up healthy.
As an animal lover, there are countless episodes of her gentleness with dogs, squirrels, birds, cows and even donkeys.
Bhuri Bai was a great believer in the power of silence. The wall on the entrance of her house bears the word “Chup” (silence). When asked once about the technique to obtain the state of dhyan (deep concentration), she is believed to have retorted “Yahan bey-dhyan kaun hai?” (who is not already immersed in the meditative state) – condensing in one sentence the entire Vedanta.
Known for several such smart repartees, she was as self-respecting as articulate. When the King of Mewar asked her if she needed any aid for her sustenance, Bhuri Bai gave an answer that was not just full of self esteem, it also carefully guarded the honour of the royalty. She said, “How can I be in want when I have sons such as you!”
Her colourful paintings of Lord Ram along with Laxman and Shabri and another one of Kak Bhusundi relating the Ramayana still adorn the walls of one of her rooms with great vividness and speak of special talent.
Though mostly self taught and self realized, Bhuri Bai attributed her spiritual ripening to Bavji Chatur Singhji who is known to be the Valmiki of Mewari literature.
Sitting on the floor in front of her idol in her meditation room was one of most unique experiences of my life. The cool room filled me with calm and quietude, even if it lasted just that day. It was a rare condition and one worth aspiring for.
Probably this lady sage has already told us how to obtain the blissful state. On persistent requests about penning her wisdom, she had once spilled ink on a book and smeared it all over. At the end, she wrote just one precious word: ‘Ram’ on the cover page.
Her message was simple: “All else is darkness except the Name of God.”
Article by Akrita Reyar, published in zeenews.com, India, on March 12, 2013
(The views expressed by the author are personal)
Credit to Naina, Osho World
Related article Osho Speaks on Bhuribai
Predators Without Chain
Published on 15.4.2013, Frank Thadeusz of Der Spiegel writes about Kevin Dutton’s latest book, The Wisdom of Psychopaths: What Saints, Spies, and Serial Killers Can Teach Us About Success (original English title).
Psychology: Could one also make a career instead of becoming a serial perpetrator? Soul watchers discover the type of professionally successful psychopaths. A British scholar even believes that everybody can learn from those who are perturbed.
The book is about research into the lives of psychopaths and their cunning behaviour patterns. The author set out on a vast inquiry – including the latest advances in brain scanning and neuroscience – to find out not only what makes a psychopath but also which jobs are particularly attractive for this type of human. He found that leading are corporate chiefs and lawyers, followed by surgeons in the fourth position; priests are found in the eighth position.
He describes the difference between a psychopath and a normal corporate leader: “A normal person having just lost a billion by messing up would lock himself into the toilet and throw up. The psychopath goes home undeterred and doesn’t even think about it.” By this he means financial jugglers such as Bernard Madoff and Richard Fuld of the Lehman Brothers; also included in his research are Kennedy, Nixon, Clinton, and Steve Jobs.
Dutton’s theory is that we all possess psychopathic tendencies, that society as a whole is more psychopathic than ever. He argues that there are indeed “functional psychopaths” among us — different from their murderous counterparts — who use their detached, unflinching, and charismatic personalities to succeed in mainstream society, and that shockingly, in some fields, the more “psychopathic” people are, the more likely they are to succeed.
The book appears provocative and reveals a lot of food for thought about the so-called dark side in many humans.
The article by Der Spiegel concludes:
“How to exploit one’s followers bluntly and in an exceedingly comfortable manner, was virtuously demonstrated by another sect leader in the seventies. The Indian Chandra Mohan Jain, also known as Bhagwan, preached humility to his disciples but for himself he aspired to own a Rolls Royce for every day of the year.
That his followers accepted this contradiction uncomplainingly, was commented by Bhagwan in probably the only possible way: ‘Five percent of the people are intelligent, the remaining 95 percent are our followers.’”
Now the reader may wonder why Osho is mentioned in this context at all. I asked myself the same question and in lieu of having the actual book at hand, went online and checked Dutton’s book at Amazon. There is a clever little search button for the contents in the book and interestingly none of the names for Osho, or Poona, or even India came up. Assuming that Amazon’s search engine works, this is puzzling; one must assume Dutton didn’t mention Osho at all.
The writer of the review – in the typical shabby and whacky manner of Der Spiegel – may have simply thought he would attract more readers if he would include Osho’s photo, two lame paragraphs about Osho and an entirely false quote attributed to Osho. Der Spiegel’s archives have also not been updated in a long time – Mr. Tadeusz, the names you used for Osho haven’t been used since the late eighties and as for the quote, you might be well advised to do your research.
Bhagawati for Osho News
Thanks to Sankalpa and Bodhena for getting the article to us.
Osho – A Mystery
Pratiksha Among Newsmakers of the Year
Pratiksha’s latest exhibition in Chandigarh has received wide attention and much praise. More than thirty articles have been written since about her superb and inspirational paintings. The writers always mention that Pratiksha is Osho’s niece and publish her quotes about him and meditation. As a random example, Amarjot Kaur of The Tribune writes,
She paints wisdom that is drenched in meditation and it radiates a vision that runs in equal proportion to the intensity of her thoughts. It’s the rarity of her creative expression that delves deep into spirituality to define her existence and she just basks in the sheer joy that she derives from painting while meditating.”
Slideshow of her artwork: Pratiksha: Expressing the Inexpressible
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In Spirituality
Empty your Cup
Rainbow Therapy
Intense Love
Out of the Frame
Totality is the Key
There is an intricate relationship between an act and the end result. We always want to have a perfect result for whatever we do, without losing ourselves in the act. Is such an act possible? To understand the fine difference, it is important to examine ‘perfection’ and ‘totality’. Although for many people, perfection is the ultimate goal, it is nothing less than illusion or myth; something which is nonexistent. We are attracted by the very idea of perfection, not realising that it is like a disease which is dangerous and destructive. If not for our obsession with perfection, our action could open the door to a beautiful spiritual journey.
Whatever you do, just pour your heart in it, do it with totality. The Bhagawad Gita says that karma is enjoyable if the heart is involved in it. Then there is no karma and kerta; both melt and become one. That is totality. Perfection is myth, while totality is reality.
Perfection is a goal somewhere in the future while totality is an experience this very moment, in which your act is transformed into meditation and a beautiful prayer descends in your heart. In fact, there is not future reference or goal for totality; only a routine life style albeit soaked in spiritual fragrance.
If you do any work or any act with your whole heart, then you are total, then you are walking on the same path which Kabir and Ravidas chose.
The whole idea is to ‘be total’ in everything that you are doing. It doesn’t matter what you do, whether you are making clothes like Kabir or shoes like Ravidas, or cooking food or working on a new design for most advanced spacecraft, or cleaning the floor. The job is immaterial. The focus is that doing is with totality, which is the only way to transform the act into meditation and to transform the doing into a beautiful prayer.
The founder of Tantra vision, Saraha, born two centuries after Gautama Buddha in Vidarbha didstrict, Maharashtra, later became a disciple of Skri Kirti, a Buddhist saint and disciple of Buddha’s son Rahul Bhadra. Saraha, along with his father and four brothers, spent some time in the court of King Mahapala and he was particularly popular among his brothers for his knowledge of the Vedas.
After some time, the Brahmin Saraha became a sanyasin and chose Sri Kirti as his master. Immediately after his initiation, the first thing Sri Kirti asked Saraha was to drop all the Vedas, and all the learnings. After many years, Saraha became a great meditator. One day, while in meditation, Saraha had a vision that there was a woman in the market place who would become his real teacher. Saraha told his guru about the vision and with his blessings, left to seek the truth about his visions.
Sarah found the woman he saw in his vision in the marketplace. She was a young woman of a lower-caste arrowsmith family. She was making an arrow. For Saraha, this was a major shift – a learned Brahmin saint seeking out an arrowsmith woman as guru.
Saraha watched her carefully. The young woman was lively and luminous with life, cutting an arrow shaft, deeply absorbed in the process. Saraha immediately felt something extraordinary, something he had never heard or learnt in the scriptures or from any guru. Her very action of making the arrow illuminated the heart of Saraha.
He continued watching her working on the arrow. She, on the other hand, was working intensely without realising his presence or getting perturbed by his stare. For her, no one existed at that moment. After the arrow was ready, she closed one eye and opened the other as if pointing towards a target to check the fineness of the arrow. And that very moment something happened. Saraha understood the real meaning which he couldn’t discover in life despite reciting from various books. She was much absorbed in the act; there was no duality. She was one with her work. She gave Saraha the real message of Buddha – to be total in the action is to be free of action. Be total and you will be free. For the first time, he understood what meditation is.
The ordinary arrowsmith woman became the real teacher of a Brahmin guru without saying a word or mantra correcting scripture. Saraha got enlightened with just her presence involving routine work of making an arrow, albeit completely absorbed and melted with the act in the process.
Related articles
Pratiksha: Expressing the Inexpressible
Intense Love
Rainbow Therapy
‘Slow Sex’ DVD Wins Award
The ceremony took place before a packed house at the Mathäser Filmpalast in Munich, on April 26, 2013. The producer, Pavrati (Ela Buchwald), and Puja accepted the award.
Every year in spring, the Cosmic Cine Film Festival shows the Best Open Mind Movies that reflect the current zeitgeist with their meaning and significance, and inspire to make life one’s own responsibility. All nominated films form an overall symphony matching the theme of this year, “A World Full of Possibilities” and set creative impulses, show new understandings and ideas beyond borders.
Last year, widely-read German woman’s magazine Brigitte Woman published a 5-page interview with Puja as the cover story for their 10/12 issue, all about having more time for love, having slow sex, and how sex is so much more enjoyable when the partners are relaxed.
Satya Puja is the author of several books on Tantra, including Tantric Orgasm for Women and Tantric Love Letters, and is the co-author of Tantric Sex for Men. Together with her partner, Michael (aka Swami Raja), she has been teaching week-long “Making Love” retreats for couples since 1993. She lives in Switzerland.
DVD Slow Sex is available at innenwelt-verlag.de - amazon.de
Credit to Jivana
Terence Stamp Today
Terence Stamp was born in 1938 in Mile End, East London. As a young actor, after his screen debut in Peter Ustinov’s film Billy Budd in the sixties, he was nominated for an Oscar. Another well-known movie he starred in at the time was John Schlesinger’s Far from the Madding Crowd; soon he was a movie icon and was seen around with many beautiful women, including July Christie and Jean Shrimpton. He was even contacted by producer Harry Salzman in 1967 to take over the role of James Bond after Sean Connery stepped out. Terence Stamp remembers with humor, “Like most English actors, I’d have loved to be 007 because I really know how to wear a suit… But I think my ideas about it put the frighteners on Harry. I didn’t get a second call from him.”
He lived in Italy for several years and in 1967/68 worked with Federico Fellini on his ‘Toby Dammit’ section of the Edgar Allan Poe portmanteau film Histoires extraordinaires/Spirits of the Dead and with Pier Paolo Pasolini on Theorem (keystone of the BFI retrospective). It was Fellini who introduced Terence Stamp to J. Krishnamurti in 1968, which sparked his interest in spirituality.
After filming The Mind of Mr. Soames in 1970, movie offers began to cease. In 1975 he filmed Hu-Man which for him “was the only serious film I did [during those years], and that was really independent. We’d get some money, shoot for a few days, use the money, ‘See you a few months later!’ – it was that kind of thing. So I travelled. I thought I’m not going to stay around here facing this day-in-day-out rejection and the phone not ringing… I went from being a lead actor to nothing. I was devastated. My agent told me people were now looking for a young Terence Stamp.”
He went to Egypt and then “wound up in India and that opened a whole new world to me – that was an amazing thing to happen to a young performer. It’s quite widespread now, but to go there as a very young man and to meet great thinkers and great sages and to learn about breathing and movement and the whole canvas of mysticism…”
And then there is a gap – the time he spent at Shree Rajneesh Ashram in Poona where he became Swami Deva Veeten in 1976. It is interesting to note that none of the newspapers mentioned that.
Returning to his acting career in 1978, he played the Kryptonian super villain General Zod in Superman. Nick Curtis, in the London Evening Standard writes, “The ashram filled the gap when work dried up for him in the 1970s, and he was changed after his return. The BFI season feels like a vindication of his decision not to do ‘crap’ films for money, he says. He is philosophical about not having children, and about being single after his six-year marriage to Elizabeth O’Rourke, a Singaporean-Australian pharmacist 35 years his junior, ended in 2008. ‘I was married and I can’t call that a mistake,’ he says. ‘But I am set in my ways. I have never been in a relationship where the silence was mutual. And being lonely for me isn’t the same as other people understand it.’”
In 1979, Peter Brook directed the movie Meetings with Remarkable Men that many of our readers are familiar with. Brook tells the story of Asian mystic G. I. Gurdjieff, with Terence Stamp playing Prince Lubovedsky. Film critic Hal Erickson states that Terence Stamp “briefly retreated from his career after this picture, in favour of Eastern meditation.”
Among his later key movies are The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, The Limey, and Bowfinger. His most recent film, Song for Marion, is a touching story about ways of letting go – of life, of self-consciousness, of inhibition, a comedy-drama about death, loss and choral singing. It was nominated for three awards at the 2012 British Independent Film Awards: for Best Actor, Best Screenplay, and Best Supporting Actress. At the 2013 Beijing International Film Festival Song for Marion was awarded with Best Actor for Terence Stamp.
Terence Stamp answers questions at the British Film Awards for 2012
Nick Curtis concludes in his article, “The greatest example of how Stamp differs from your average film star is that he is technically homeless. In America, he stays in a friend’s guest house in Ojai, California, or in the New York flat and Hamptons house owned by his brother Chris, who used to manage The Who and Jimi Hendrix, and who died last November. Stamp also has the use of properties in Geneva and Gstaad owned by Chris’ Swiss widow. In London he stays with two friends, in Notting Hill and Knightsbridge, or in hotels: ‘My favourite is the Savoy, but I often can’t afford it,’ he says. ‘The absolute, honest truth is I would love to come back to England, but my taste has exceeded my earning capacity by so much that whenever I see something I like, I am millions short. And I can’t really go back to Plaistow [where he lived as a child], you know.’
“That said, whenever he’s in London, he goes back to what used to be ‘the old Green Street Market’ on Barking Road, which is now ‘Little Bombay’, and the only place he can find a particular mango he got addicted to in India. Last time he visited, a porter greeted him with: ‘Allo Terry, what the f*** are you doin’ here?’ He always walks or takes the bus, and laments the passing of the Routemaster, and the fact that the No 15 doesn’t go as far as it used to.
“‘I feel I’m kind of an urban icon,’ Stamp says, ‘that I’ve earned my place, because, you know, what the English love best is longevity. I will be 75 this July. I am five years away from being 80. That’s ridiculous. But it’s all still working, so I’m delighted.’ He puts on his hat and walks into the Waterloo sunset.”
Way to go, Terence!
Bhagawati, Osho News
Related article Osho Initiates Terence Stamp into Sannyas
Revealed! Osho’s Controversial Views on Women
The Daily Bhaskar has gotten into the habit of publishing sensational and negative articles about Osho and sannyasins. In this particular article, they show great images of Osho and joyful female sannyasins to lure the reader, and then added to some of the photos words they attribute to Osho but are really knowingly distorted by them. This is just one batty article of many they are churning out on a regular basis.
Related discourse by Osho Don’t be Angry at the Press People
Related letter Yellow Press
Vinod Bharti – aka Vinod Khanna
‘Did Osho destroy veteran actor Vinod Khanna’s Bollywood career?’
TDB must have had intense tutorials from such notorious news rags as Bild Zeitung in Germany, The Sun in England, and Weekly World News and The National Enquirer in the USA. By the way, the paper used in the distant past for colonial newspapers was made in England from rags, hence the expression, but I digress.
Someone at TDB found an interview from 2002 that Vinod gave to The Times of India and performed a hatchet job, using bits here and there to create sensationalist coverage. Speculations are rife at TDB that “there are many who believe that if Vinod Khanna wouldn’t have ‘followed’ Osho, the history of Bollywood would have been something else. Amitabh Bachchan might not be a superstar and Vinod Khanna’s career would not have been like this as it is believed that if any actor could have given a real fight to Big B, it was Vinod Khanna.”
As intelligent people know, speculations about the past are nonsense and irrelevant, and have nothing to do with the path Vinod chose.
Born in Peshawar in 1946 (then British India, now Pakistan), his family moved to Bombay when India was partitioned. While at boarding school he fell in love with motion pictures after watching the famous epic Mughal-e-Azam. After graduating from Sydenham College with a commerce degree, he embarked on his movie career. He debuted in Sunil Dutt’s 1968 film Man Ka Meet, playing a villain; he got rave reviews and within a week, he had signed up for 15 films.
He is considered to be one of the best looking actors in Bollywood and because of his charming personality, he became popular with the audience and featured in innumerable lead roles. He is one of the few Bollywood actors who could successfully transition from negative roles to positive lead roles.
With his career at a peak, he became Osho’s sannyasin on the last day of the year 1975 in Pune. I remember Vinod very well from the seventies at the ashram and hung out sometimes at his house to watch videos together with a few other friends, a rare opportunity back then; he was always amiable and joyful and never displayed big movie star eccentricity as far as I experienced.
While in Rajneeshpuram he worked mainly as a gardener (“I was Osho’s mali”). Upon returning to India and Bollywood, his comeback movie Insaaf (opposite Dimple Kapadia) in 1987 was a big hit, and Vinod starred as a hero in several movies until 1994. In 1999 he received a Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award for his contribution to the film industry for over three decades.
Moving into politics because he had a feeling to serve the nation, he joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in 1997 and was elected from Gurdaspur constituency in Punjab in the next year’s Lok Sabha poll. In July 2002 he became Union Minister for Culture and Tourism and was India’s Minister of State for External Affairs (junior foreign minister), holding office from 2003-2004.
He continues to star in movies and receiving awards, like the Zee Cine Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2007. His latest action movies from 2012 are Dabangg 2 and Players, while five new Hindi movies are scheduled to be released in summer 2013.
Vinod never concealed the fact that he is Osho’s sannyasin. To this day he remains connected with sannyasins, participates at events in Oshodham and Osho Galleria in New Delhi, visits Osho Nisarga in Dharamsala and a couple of years ago also visited Osho Tapoban in Nepal.
In aforementioned Times of India interview, Vinod concluded,
Everything is a manifestation of God: I have a vision and believe in making my own destiny. Spirituality is the transcendence of beliefs and systems. It involves gaining mastery over the mind. Spiritualism brings about peace of mind — it destroys everything that is negative. Everything around us, whether good or bad, is a manifestation of God.”
Bhagawati, Osho News
Illustrations credit: indya101.com, BollywoodSaesam, bollycurry,com, oshotapoban.com, oshoworld.com, Girish Shukla, Rajneesh Foundation Photo Services, BCCL timescontent.com
Indian envoy lauds Osho Tapoban’s contribution
Credit to Santosh
Outlawed in Pakistan
Reports about rapes are increasing rapidly and especially women in Asia no longer keep silent about the brutal abuse they suffered and dare to go public in spite of often being shunned and attacked by their own families. After a heinous attack on a young woman and her boyfriend in Delhi last year, widespread public protests and outrage demanded the death penalty for the perpetrators and although new laws were recently passed in India to prevent and prosecute rape and other sex crimes, an independent UN expert said they “do not go far enough.”
What usually is not addressed is that especially in rural areas the blame is squarely put on the woman’s head, and although some of the perpetrators are eventually punished, nobody ever thinks about the victim who must try to rebuild her life after the ordeal. A typical example is the social attitude towards women in Haryana. In this region, close to Delhi, men still call the shots. The all-male village council meetings called khaps, are tremendously powerful both socially and politically. Women are usually not included in those meetings. One council elder was reported as saying that girls should be forced to marry young to protect them from rapists although it is clear that being married hasn’t protected women from being assaulted.
A new film shows the courage of Kainat Soomro, a young Pakistani woman who was 13 when she was brutally gang-raped and held in captivity for three days until she managed to flee. The men in her village denied her accusations and the tribal elders declared her as ‘outlawed’ for having sex outside marriage. They even had the gall to encourage Kainat’s family to kill her themselves. Courageously her father and brother refused and the case went to court.
The lengthy legal battle was followed by filmmakers Habiba Nosheen and Hilke Schellmann for years. They filmed the daily problems the family faced, reported on the murder of Kainat’s brother, followed her alleged rapists, and investigated women’s lives in traditional Pakistani communities. The result is the PBS Frontline documentary, ‘Outlawed in Pakistan’.
It is unimaginable cruelty that such men unleash on a woman, it is a crude and sick self-importance that makes them think they can just abuse and torture a woman as if it were their birth right. And don’t think this is only happening in Asia. It is happening everywhere 24/7 on this planet in various contexts.
Men have shown inconceivable disrespect of women down the ages. They have murdered millions of women by forcing them to be burned alive on their husbands’ funeral pyre. Have they forgotten that a woman gave birth to their miserable life? Have they forgotten that it is a woman who gives birth to their all important sons? This is widespread chauvinist oppression of women who are being used like cattle, many beaten by their husbands on a regular basis.
Whatever punishment is given will not deter other men to go about such dastardly deeds. Nobody addresses the root cause of these atrocious acts – male supremacy and sexual repression that turns into violent acts against women. This is what we must look at. We need change, not revenge. Although knowing that one’s perpetrator has been punished for years in prison might bring some mental relief to the victim, we see across the globe that a woman raped is ultimately being punished for it.
Demonstrations won’t change the bigoted male attitude, women’s liberation movement won’t change the sexist mind. What is needed is for the society to change.
We Need to Come Together
In this video, he speaks of “The Mystic Osho” and cites the quote that is shown on the screen behind him.
At 4.13 minutes David Icke says, “The mystic Osho said about the awakened man, – woman, whatever, we are all consciousness anyway – he said,
‘People are afraid, very much afraid of those who know themselves. They have a certain power, a certain aura and a certain magnetism – a charisma that can take out alive, young people from the traditional imprisonment.The enlightened man cannot be enslaved – that is the difficulty – and he cannot be imprisoned.
…The enlightened man is the greatest stranger in the world, he does not seem to belong to anybody. No organization confines him, no community, no society, no nation.’
Osho, The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from Oneself, Ch 9, Q 1
davidicke.com
American Indian songsManantial
Lyrics for ‘We Must Come Together’ by GreenZilla
Credit to Sugit
A Darshan of Garbage
Osho said, “Godliness is next to cleanliness” and I could understand this Osho idiom when I saw pictures of the oceanic garbage in the Uttarakhand area.
I fail to understand the minds of people who worship the idol in a temple and completely neglect the environment all around. The vast nature, the breathtaking beauty of the hills and the rivers has no meaning for such devotees. What kind of religious attitude is this that makes people so insensitive, so irreverent to life?
My friends in the West often ask me this question. One intelligent man asked, “Darshan is so important in Indian spirituality, you guys go to the guru, to the temple to have a darshan. And the meaning of darshan is to look closely, deeply, isn’t it?”
I said, “Yes,” without having the slightest clue what this was leading to. “If they have the capacity to look, they can see everything. So why can’t they have a darshan of garbage, the filth lying all around? Why can’t they see the poverty of the vast majority?”
I had no answer. He had touched a raw nerve. I could never understand it myself, too. The more religious a person becomes, the more he is careless about his surroundings. This could be because what they call religion, only exists in some rituals, some traditional methods of prayer and worship. Most people have a split personality.
Their religion does not transform their baser emotions. Their devotion does not make them more compassionate and kind to human beings, to the animals or to trees.
They go to the temples to collect some virtue, punya as if virtue means some kind of money that can be stored. Take Osho’s advice, “You have to clean yourself; and nothing less than emptiness will be accepted as cleanliness. Cleanliness is next to emptiness. In fact, cleanliness is another name for inner emptiness. Throw out all the rotten furniture and rags.”
It is an ancient culture, so it is full of ancient junk. Unless it is thrown out cleanliness will be next to impossible! – The writer is in the management team of Osho International Meditation Resort, Pune. She facilitates meditation workshops around the country and abroad.
Treasure Trove in You
‘The Speaking Tree‘, 30th June 2013, New Delhi, India.
Through her art, Pratiksha Apurv shows us how the Divine light permeates the layers of consciousness within.
For a meditator the biggest challenge is attaining sakshi bhav, a state where the seeker can clear the head of a cloud of thoughts. One must have experienced the distraction while sitting silently in meditation. The thoughts and the observer, both are one in this situation, thus making the journey to spiritual bliss not just difficult but arduous. This is because we have always ignored the unconsciousness to such an extent that we don’t even know its existence and the fact that it plays an important role in our daily lives.

Beyond Psychology 1, Oil on Canvas 2011
Sow The Seed
Our effort of removing thoughts without acknowledging the existence of the unconsciousness becomes a futile exercise hampering spiritual growth. First of all, we have to accept the existence of unconsciousness and its deep connection with consciousness. In other words, unconsciousness is the soil where you need to sow the seed for flowering in consciousness. We all are conscious, the word often used to describe our decision. What we don’t know is that a particular decision is rooted in action that emanates from the unconsciousness. There has to be a meeting point of consciousness and unconsciousness for implementation of that decision in practical terms, for flowering and to separate the thoughts from the observer, making the spiritual journey a blissful one.
The only way to discover the vast galaxy of unconsciousness is through hypnosis, something we know very little of. Hypnosis is the tool for seekers to reach the unconscious layer that is controlling the functions of the conscious layer. The two are connected — the seeds sown in the layer of unconscious soil, flowers in the conscious layer, our existing state. Hypnosis is not meditation; it is just a tool that helps you to meditate and takes you deeper into your path. It plays the role of a coordinator by establishing the harmonious balance between thoughts coming from the unconscious and action triggered by the conscious to remove the distraction.
If you find it difficult to meditate, then first go through hypnosis so that you get deep into the unconscious and that makes you understand that meditation is a simple thing and you are perfectly capable of doing it. Hypnosis can create that conviction in your life. And then, sitting silently, you will simply go into meditation without any difficulty as the whole unconscious will be supporting it and there will be no distraction.
There is nothing technical about hypnosis which is a significant part of our daily life. All you have to do is to develop trust in this therapy which ensures spiritual growth. Whenever you feel that thoughts have erected barriers in your path and attaining the observer status — where thoughts and observer become two different entities — this therapy can provide a solution by taking you into the unconsciousness galaxy and facilitating relevant changes that would be visible in your conscious. It is the only way of segregating the cloud of thoughts from the observer.
The meeting ground for the consciousness and unconsciousness is important and any visible change is possible only when the two are communicating or a connection between the two is established. In our normal life this is not happening, because both are separate and there is no meeting ground. Hypnosis is the only scientific tool that is capable of preparing a meeting of the two. Once you reach the collective consciousness, the dive in cosmic unconscious will be another step. True hypnosis will happen the moment you dive into the cosmic unconscious and establish the connection. You will undergo a complete mutation.
Hypnosis Helps
The hypnotist is only a guide to awaken you to your own power. This power can do tremendous work and can be used for many things: healing, making one live longer, medical, psychotherapeutic uses, military uses, for self-improvement, entertainment, forensics, sports, education, physical therapy, to heal irritable bowel syndrome, rehabilitation and in changing ones harmful habits, smoking and drinking. Hypnotic methods have been used to re-experience drug states and mystical experiences. It has been used as an aid or alternative to chemical anaesthesia and it has been studied as a way to soothe skin ailments
I have shown consciousness through the outer layer of my painting. The next layer is of the unconscious and the third one is of the collective unconscious. And finally, the darkest one in the centre is the cosmic unconscious layer. Before entering the layers of consciousness, the rays appear in various colours but the moment they permeate into the various layers of consciousness, all the colours turn grey.
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