Showing posts with label Guru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guru. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Prem Rawat Maharaji Biography Page 1

Prem Rawat was born in India on December 10, 1957, and while still a child was given the honorary title Maharaji.
In 1971, at the age of 13, he began traveling internationally, speaking to diverse audiences about the real possibility of inner peace. At the core of his message are techniques that he makes freely available to those who wish to discover the inner experience he speaks of.
Today, Prem Rawat's message is broadcast via public channels on satellite and cable TV in more than 88 countries and 70 languages. In the US, an estimated 200 local cable networks air his addresses weekly in 33 states, reaching tens of millions of households.

Broadcasts are entirely financed by voluntary contributions and the sale of related materials. He supports himself and his family through independent means, deriving no income from the organizations that support his work.



“Within you is the most amazing feeling you can possibly imagine. All that you look for, that you have looked for all your life, has always been right inside you. This is a gift that you have, and I can show you a way to get in touch with it.”

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When news of the devastating tsunami of December 26, 2004, hit the headlines, Prem Rawat phoned Pascotto: "I'd like the Foundation to send some money. How much can it afford?" TPRF was short of funds at the time, so he auctioned off several works of art and donated the proceeds, which enabled TPRF to give enough money to the UN World Food Program to feed 9,000 survivors for a month and also to fund future humanitarian initiatives.

One such initiative, the Food for People facility in northeastern India, now serves more than 100,000 free hot meals every year to poverty-stricken people living in a remote tribal area. Prem Rawat said, "Just because people are poor does not mean they are miserable. They all have beautiful smiles on their faces, but they need food, and this project will deliver real food to them."

Prem Rawat (Maharaji) speaks at an outdoor event in Australia

TPRF also holds free medical clinics in India, where eye consultations, appropriate medicines and eyeglasses are provided to people in need. So that help can reach a greater number of people more rapidly, the Foundation partners with non-profit organizations such as the UN World Food Program, Oxfam and the Red Cross.

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THE WILD WEST

Prem Rawat’s arrival in London and Los Angeles in June and July of 1971 heralded the beginning of his international work. His mother was not initially in favor of him traveling to the west, but once his journey had begun there was no going back. News of his arrival spread among the counter-culture youth in both countries and people flocked to the airport to meet him. Many found themselves attracted by his simple wisdom, his youth and spontaneous style, and his air of purpose. His language was full of the metaphors of his everyday life: cars, ships, planes and comic books.

On June 21, 1971, at the first Glastonbury Fayre in the UK, he spoke publicly for the first time in the west. This 13-year-old boy, newly arrived in an alien culture, with an imperfect command of English, demonstrated his courage and strength of purpose by walking on stage and addressing a crowd of hippies, some of whom were naked.


He adjusted to western customs quickly and switched to European style clothes. But by then, ironically, some of his students had begun wearing Indian clothes. A few even adopted Indian names, and as they introduced his message to others, they invariably couched it in the terms of their adopt
ed culture. It seemed that from the beginning his work was to be challenged by his students’ preconceptions.

Prem Rawat’s brothers and mother followed him to England. They received a warm welcome, but the focus was on Prem. In November of 1972, seven Jumbo Jets traveled to India carrying his students to the Hans Jayanti festival. Earlier in the year he had visited Germany, Switzerland, South Africa, Kenya, Australia and Japan, as well as revisiting the U.S. and U.K.

In South Africa, at the height of the apartheid system, he spoke in defiance of the government to racially mixed audiences. “How wonderful it would be,” he said, “to be able to carry on a conversation with your heart, to be able to ask the heart how magnificent it feels to be fulfilled, and for the heart to reply in utter silence. And, in that silence, to understand the acknowledgment and to receive internally the most magnificent joy. To have a beautiful smile dance upon your lips because you have carried on that conversation with the ultimate friend you have. Through sad times and happy times, this heart of yours will be your best friend. It will never abandon you.”

The South African police took no action against him and did not try to interfere with his events. Apparently the government did not want to provoke an international incident by arresting a 14-year-old boy who had come to their country to speak about peace.

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His successor was Michael Dettmers, who said that Prem Rawat asked for a message to be sent to Bob saying, “The door that you walked out through goes both ways; you are always welcome to walk back through it.” It was sad, because Prem and Bob had enjoyed a good relationship. After his departure in late 1976, Mishler became increasingly bitter, making bizarre, unsubstantiated claims. Four years later Mishler and his wife died tragically in an air crash in the French West Indies.

By 1975, Knowledge had spread to 58 countries, but reports suggested that some of the instructors trained by Prem Rawat's mother, Mata Ji, had been teaching variants of the techniques of Knowledge. The problem may have been in part due to their poor command of English. Prem Rawat began training western instructors, and in July 1975, the first four non-Indian instructors were appointed and began traveling internationally. During the same month he held a 3 day event in Venezuela, a relatively safe haven from the political turmoil that gripped much of South America at that time. His speaking engagements that year included events in Nepal, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Malibu, Denver, Boulder, Essen, London and Sydney. In Orlando, Florida,there was an outdoor event for 8,000 people.

In February 1976, his address to members of congress in Washington, D.C. was included permanently in the Congressional Record. His event schedule included a European tour with a national coordinators meeting in Essen, Germany, and another event in Sydney, Australia.

The following year he did an extensive tour of North America, including multi-day events and an outdoor event in Miami. He also conducted seven training sessions for new instructors. In London, he did an event for 10,500 people. In Europe, his schedule included an event in Spain and a 5 day international event at Rome's Palazzo dello Sport for 14,500 people.

Events continued in 1978. The climax was a multi-day “Hans Jayanti” event in November at an outdoor location in Kissimmee, Florida. More than 20,000 people attended from all over the world.

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Prem Rawat's tour schedule during the 1970s was as hectic and demanding as it is today. By the mid 1970s, DLM was chartering various aircraft to take Prem Rawat and his staff to widely spaced events. However, after a series of alarming incidents including an engine failure and an autopilot malfunction, a safer and more reliable means of transport for Prem Rawat and his tour staff became desirable.

Boeing 707 airplane

A Boeing 707 was purchased in 1979. It was old but affordable. Prem Rawat began training for a commercial pilot's license, and the following year, after an extensive renovation project, the plane was put into service. The 707 project was well publicized internationally. Many thousands of people around the world contributed mostly small amounts to help make the purchase and refit possible. Several talented volunteers who helped refit the plane went on to establish careers in aviation-related industries.

Towards the end of the 1970s, large international events - 'festivals' as they were called at the time - were held at indoor and outdoor locations, sometimes lasting up to a week. Many people traveled from one festival to the next, finding short term employment to support their lifestyle.

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The 1980’s were watershed years, with the closure of the ashrams in the west. They had served their earlier purpose, but were no longer an effective vehicle for Prem Rawat’s work.

A hierarchical organization based around monastic, communal households would always be perceived as something religious, and sociologists writing at the time labeled DLM a "new religious movement". In fact, Knowledge as taught by Prem Rawat has never been a religion; it stands alone, independent of any dogma, customs or rituals. But DLM and the ashram system had evolved in India, with Indian customs and traditions. In the west, it was inevitable that the ashrams and the DLM itself would become obstacles.


Some people had become used to living in the ashram environment, and change was difficult for them. Some, however, had already moved out a year or two before the closure. For most, the timing was right to embrace a more outward and independent lifestyle. With the closure came the opportunity to establish a totally new, more efficient organization - Elan Vital.


"When I first came to the West, there was a lot of interest in anything that originated in India, and what I was presenting was initially perceived as Indian. However, when I saw that this placed a limit on how much my work could grow, things really started to change for me. I saw that my message was indeed a global one, not one restricted to a particular group of people. I think we have seen a lot of growth over the last 30 years because I had the foresight to adapt my message for people everywhere."

Prem Rawat made it clear that he was not living and working to honor a tradition or to conform to someone else's ideas. His teachings were based on his own experience of life and nothing else. He had received this Knowledge from his father, but it was now his responsibility to carry on the work in the way that seemed best to him. He stated that in the past he had been placed on a tall pedestal (he said he had been “turned into a hood ornament”) but that he was a normal human being who just happened to have mastery of the Knowledge and the ability to touch peoples’ hearts by speaking of it.

These examples from 1983 and 1984 are typical of his tour schedule during the 1980s and 1990s: In 1983, he visited and spoke in Sri Lanka for the first time, as well as Miami, Manchester, Leicester, Brighton (UK), New Delhi, Colombo (Sri Lanka), Kuala Lumpur, Sydney, Auckland, Melbourne, Tokyo, Cartagena (Colombia), Lima, Sao Paulo, Caracas, Mexico City, Denver, Vancouver, Santa Monica (CA), New York, Chicago, Paris, Hamburg, Milan, Madrid, London, Birmingham and Montreal.