Three weeks ago, I wanted to watch something on our television set - something that would hold my attention and would entertain or inform me. Given the number of options out there in the ether, you might think that such an itch would be very easy to scratch but not so. There's so much rubbish piled up on accessible channels - stuff that I would never want to see.
Flicking through Netflix, I found a documentary series that I thought might be just the ticket - all about a commune that evolved in the state of Oregon during the nineteen eighties. The series is titled "Wild Wild Country" and it focuses upon a cult that was centred around an Indian fellow who had become a kind of mystic - a guru if you will. His name was Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, later known as Osho. That's him in the header picture.
Back in 1981, he and his immediate followers purchased a valley in north central Oregon. It had previously been the site of The Big Muddy Ranch It was about twenty miles south east of the town of Antelope and pretty remote.
Citizens of Rajneeshpuram greeting their spiritual leader in 1983
Rajneesh's followers became known as Rajneeshees. They came from all over the world but mostly they were Americans. Some of them were pretty wealthy, influential people. Together they turned the valley into a small city known as Rajneeshpuram. It had lots of good accommodation, a large meeting hall and even its own airstrip. They built a reservoir and a sewage reclamation plant. There was a police station, a fire department, cafes and restaurants and a health facility. It is estimated that at its height over 7,000 people lived there including a large number of down-and-out homeless people from various American cities.
Downtown Rajneeshpuram in its heyday
Although I watched all six episodes of the documentary, by the end I remained very unclear about what if anything Rajneesh had been preaching. What was his message and why did he attract so many devotees? I mean he looked like a guru with his customary smile and his long white beard and his mystical robes but what was he actually saying?
Anyway, by 1988 it had all fallen apart for mixed reasons. Local citizens were distrustful, politicians and lawmakers were quite hostile and within the cult itself cracks began to appear with various accusations and wrong turns. The dream was over as the authorities began to circle like hawks.
Today the former site of Rajneeshpuram is occupied by a Christian youth organisation called Young Life . It's like a giant summer camp and retreat - operating within the remit of The Washington Family Ranch. I checked out their website and could find no reference at all to Rajneeshpuram. It's almost like it was never there - a kind of fiction - which I suppose it was.
I remember different cults when I was growing up but don't remember this one, not that it matters if I remember it. Don't all cults burn themselves out sooner or later? Even the current MAGAt cult here in the USA is showing signs, however slight, of imploding.
ReplyDeleteLet's hope in does because a big cult is living in The White House right now.
DeleteI'm wondering why they all wore Orange, it seems more like it was a cult with everyone following the one leader.
ReplyDeleteMany had a lovely time for a while at least. Funny how Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh did not have to wear the colours that his followers wore.
DeleteOne man was able to persuade hundreds to follow him. Why? There have been many cults. They all use the same message that attracts many for some more peaceful life.
ReplyDeleteWhy don't you set up a cult in Red Deer Keith? The Red Cult. I would join it.
DeleteSome of the members “seeded” a few local buffet restaurants with a strain of salmonella, supposedly to allow them to influence local elections. The outbreak resulted in more than 700 people falling ill. Several cult members went to jail for those crimes and others. The orange and red colors they wore had something to do with the sun… ?
ReplyDeleteThankfully they did not kill anybody bit even so it was a terrible thing to do as they sought political control of the county.
DeleteOne usually finds that such cults end because the 'Guru' was found to have a hareem of several twelve year old girls.
ReplyDeleteWell I do not know about such things my friend but you clearly do!
DeleteAn interesting post that lead me (partly) down memory lane; the cult owned a disco in Stuttgart, one of many money-making businesses they were (legally, I want to add) involved with. That disco for a while was a firm favourite of me and my girl friends; it was well lit, we liked the music, admission wasn't too expensive and it felt safer than many of the other clubs we sometimes frequented. We called it the Baghwan Disco.
ReplyDeleteSince the documentary left you with not much information about his actual teachings or preachings, I copy this excerpt from wikipedia here for you:
He rejected institutional religions, insisting that spiritual experience could not be organized into any one system of religious dogma. As a guru, he advocated meditation and taught a unique form called dynamic meditation. Rejecting traditional ascetic practices, he encouraged his followers to embrace life fully while remaining unattached to worldly desires.
It seems to me that what he was advocating was pure hogwash.
DeleteI'm in Portland, Oregon and remember the whole Rajneesh debacle well. They took over the town of Antelope, followers were seeking 'enlightenment' and the Rajneesh had multiple Rolls Royce but it was Ma Anand Sheela who ran the show. They brought in homeless people and tried to register them to vote in the county. The election board rejected them and Sheela had "Salmonella put into salad bars at ten restaurants in The Dalles, Oregon; about 750 people became ill with salmonella poisoning."[Wikipedia]
ReplyDeleteYes, it was a cult and for a long time many of us wouldn't wear multiple garments of red, the color the Rajneeshees wore.
You might say that it was like a flower or maybe a pernicious weed that bloomed for a while and then died.
DeleteIt seems much of American history is now being hidden.
ReplyDeleteThe Maga-God makes sure of that Andrew.
DeleteI'm more a medical programme kind of girl. How people get caught up in these cults is mind-boggling.
ReplyDeleteI agree. Kind of frightening.
DeleteCults must meet a need in certain people - they have been around long enough. They all seem to collapse, as this one did and the head honchos show their true colours. How dispicable to poison so many people. Let's hope a certain idiot (you all know who!) doesn't get the same idea.
ReplyDeleteAre you referring to Tango Man?
DeleteThere will always be people who want to be told how to think and act and there will always be people who see them as an opportunity to attain power, money, and lots of sex. This is just the way of us. We are sheep. It has been proven over and over and over again.
ReplyDeleteI could never have been drawn into such a lie.
DeleteWhat rang a bell with me was the name Bhagwan, which is a title rather than a name, and suggests that he saw himself (and was regarded by others) as a god rather than just as a leader. In the Wiki article on Rajneesh there is a quote:
ReplyDelete"... The day I called myself Bhagwan ... I started working on a different level, in a different dimension. Now I give you being, not knowledge. I was an acharya and they were students; they were learning. Now I am no more a teacher and you are not here as students. I am here to impart being. I am here to make you awaken. I am not here to give knowledge, I am going to give you knowing- and that is a totally different dimension.” --- "All the wrong people automatically disappeared and a totally different quality of people started arriving. It worked well. It sorted out well, only those who are ready to dissolve with me, remained. All others escaped. --- "
Those seem like the words of a charlatan to me.
DeleteAll the times I visited Oregon and I never heard of this.
ReplyDeleteYou could have joined them Bob. If only you had known.
DeleteOne cult, replaced another cult.
ReplyDeleteYeah - the Trump Cult in their silly red caps
DeleteDave and I watched that documentary years ago and really liked it. I've found that Netflix is often good for documentaries.
ReplyDeleteI must admit that I found some of it rather tedious. They could have done it all in three episodes - not six.
DeleteI don't know anything thing about this. I guess I was too busy raising my kids during the 80s!
ReplyDeletePerfect excuse Ellen.
DeleteUnless a site has some kind of historical or sentimental significance, we usually don't acknowledge it's history and for the owners or managers of Young Life, it's completely irrelevant.
ReplyDeleteWhy isn't there a cult who wear green?
There was such a cult Kylie! It was known as the RHAHMM cult and they lived in Sherwood Forest here in England.
Delete