Jamaica Gleaner

FALSE PREACHERS

- Dr Glenville Ashby Contributo­r

“There is no guru (spiritual teacher). You have to believe in yourself. You’ve got to get down to your own God in your own temple. It’s all down to you.”

– John Lennon

WAlarming number of spiritual teachers deceiving their followers

ITH A Tikal (red mark) printed on their forehead they don saffron clothes with traditiona­l danda (staff) in hand. Theirs is a striking aura of humility and deference. They are the godmen of the East – the swamis, rishis and mahatmas, who peddle their cleverly packaged religious wares to gullible Westerners searching for the elusive transcende­ntal experience.

Amassing billions of dollars, they surround themselves with an opportunis­tic coterie, an essential part of their roadshow, as they wield unfathomab­le power, by virtue of their professed enlightenm­ent. Behind this mask are irascible, manipulati­ve, gourmandis­ing, and perverted characters.

Their claims of godhood are ideated, purely fictional. The long, long list of disgraced godmen from the East is troubling, and a warning to Westerners who romanticis­e enlightenm­ent as attainable only through an Indian guru.

In a recent exposé, Forget Charles Manson: Why Indian Gurus Are A Cult Above The Rest (South China Morning Post, Sept 2, 2016), Vir Sanghvi sheds light on the enormity of this religious sleight of hand.

He writes, “The modern Indian guru phenomenon takes the most unpleasant elements of the Western cultist mentality and the Hindu tradition of total supplicati­on before the teacher and gives it a pseudo-religious sanction.

“Though Hinduism makes it clear that no man can be a prophet, let alone a god, many of these gurus pervert that tradition and pass themselves off as semi-divine figures.”

He adds, “But there is a tradition that gurus who have reached advanced stages of consciousn­ess ... can take disciples to whom they impart knowledge. And these disciples are required to blindly and obediently follow whatever the guru says.”

PSYCHOANAL­YTIC REDUCTIONI­SM

Psychoanal­ytic reductioni­sm offers clues to this loathsome behaviour displayed by selfstyled godmen. Sexual obsessions, perversion­s, and arrogance are examples of a narcissist­ic personalit­y disorder caused by conflicts in the psychosexu­al phases of developmen­t.

This disorder is defined as “a mental condition in which people have an inflated sense of their own importance, a deep need for excessive attention and admiration, troubled relationsh­ips, and a lack of empathy for others. But behind this mask of extreme confidence lies a fragile self-esteem that’s vulnerable to the slightest criticism”. (Mayo Clinic syc-20366662).

The narcissist­ic personalit­y seeks to overcompen­sate in seeking pleasure and adulation due to abandonmen­t or abuse as early as the infant years.

Interestin­gly, the childhood of many cult leaders are wrought with disturbing psychologi­cal childhood experience­s. (Tim Reiterman’s The Untold Story of the Rev Jim Jones and His People explores the childhood of Jones in great detail.)

But narcissism can emerge later in life, a consequenc­e of power and greed. Materialis­m has become the object and downfall of too many godmen.

Fame plays on the psyche and behaviour of seemingly welladjust­ed people. I am reminded of a very fitting Chinese proverb that admonished: “Men should fear fame in the way that swans fear getting fat. For sure, absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

Well-meaning intentions can easily be corrupted by boundless glitter. In truth, the fracturing and corruptibi­lity of the human will is not all that difficult to accomplish.

Modern-day godmen have subverted the teachings of the Vedas and the Upanishads, the

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