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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

When the Master Rapes


 

“To stay with a broken heart, with a rumbling stomach, with the feeling of hopelessness and wanting to get revenge—that is the path of true awakening.”
~ Pema Chödrön

It was in the early eighties after returning from a three month stint at the ashram in India.  We returned to the US with plans to begin an ashram in the desert.  With the approval of Gurudev we moved onto some land being offered by an elderly couple who had once started a spiritual community there.  There was just a handful of us with a respected senior sannyasin in charge.  With my ecstatic spiritual batteries recently charged in India, I was full of optimism and inspiration. 
The high desert in Southern California can be challenging.  Depending on the time of year the days are hot, nights are cold, winds can be strong and episodic rains cause minor flooding.  By early spring temperatures rise into the nineties and steadily rise into the hundreds.  We were farming/gardening, maintaining buildings and promoting the ashram as a yoga sanctuary.  Personally, I loved every minute of it: the hard work, spiritual camaraderie, opportunities for meditation and especially evening kirtan. 
We had some difficulties.  My wife was not as enthusiastic as I was about the project and we fretted over our two and a half year old daughter.  There was a growing tension within our small group which seemed mysterious to me at the time.  On the other hand, we received a visit from a highly realized disciple of our Guru who greatly impressed me.  We lead retreats with people coming from all over the country.  We grew a variety of vegetables in the mulched soil that we worked.  I became known as the master of the compost pile.  I had a multiple psychic/spiritual experiences both within meditation and in activity. 
One evening one of our novice sannyasins confessed to us that she had been having a sexual affair with our leader.  As she tearfully went on she had become aware that there were others as well.  I flashed back to a comment that I had filed away when he had remarked “just because you’re a swami it doesn’t mean you have to be a eunuch.”  I had laughed it off at the time.
Our senior swami was married and had children.  We had met them in India.  He also had a habit of extolling the virtues of “brahmacharya,” or celibacy.  I wasn’t that young at the time but I idealized this guy.  It turns out that he was having multiple affairs as he travelled across the country spreading the message of yoga.  It took awhile for it to connect in my mind; he was misusing his yogic charisma and his position of influence and power to seduce vulnerable women.
If you are truly a spiritual aspirant, stop for minute and consider how pathetic that is.  However, to paraphrase Ram Dass, what we meet in another person is a reflection of our own inner tendencies.  I had to admit that there was a spark of jealousy in me, to some extent I saw him as a rock star attracting groupies.  The fact that he was taking advantage of vulnerable women took a while to sink in.  Although it didn’t qualify as rape in any technical sense he was manipulating them.
The misuse of power and charisma for sexual purposes is certainly not new or unusual.  I grew up in the era of JFK and Martin Luther King, Jr. both of who were known to have had affairs.  Many spiritual leaders whether from mainstream religions or from apparent cults have gotten into trouble for their sexual exploits involving their followers.  Recent scandals have involved Bikram Choudhuri and Zen Roshi, Joshu Sasaki, both accused not just of sexual impropriety but rape.  Rape, of course, is not a primarily sexual act but an act of violence.  However, any misuse of power and influence at another’s expense is also an act of aggression.
Following the revelations about our teacher in the desert, I lost my respect for him and we got into an argument after which he left the ashram and never returned.  He left the country in fact after cleaning out our residual bank account.  Although I lost my respect for him in particular, I did not lose my respect for the yoga tradition nor for the many other sincere and dedicated Swamis.  It certainly opened my eyes though and I learned to see through my initial infatuation with charismatic leaders.
Of course our spiritual leaders are human beings with weaknesses.  Fame, power, charisma, etc. present temptations which can corrupt them.  In the Yoga Sutras Patanjali warns us against playing around with yogic powers.  To do so can reinforce egoic self-centeredness and cause one to stumble on the path.  Power of any kind can be corrosive.
Ultimately, as Buddha taught, we are each responsible for our own spiritual progress.  Gurus, teachers and guides are important but we might get into trouble if we lean on them too heavily.  All experiences are a potential means of growth as well as potential illusions to mislead us.  I am thankful for my experience in the desert.  Although it disillusioned me it also awakened me to my personal responsibility.  There has been much to learn since and I still find myself boxing my own shadow at times.  We have to be careful not to over-generalize.  As the saying goes, “one bad apple . . .”  On the other hand we might be well off to look at the structures of power in our spiritual organizations and how they lead to exploitation.
 


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