I'm Waiting For My Grandson
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ocker ®

10/11/2009, 19:04:17
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and I hate waiting so I thought I'd add the photo to a 1982 newspaper story about Rawat and here it is. So pretty:


Guru Maharaj Ji Puts his Case Guru Maharaj Ji Puts his Case



Michael Gawenda

The Age

March 24, 1982


Johnny Young looked nervous as the Guru Maharaj Ji walked into the
hotel room flanked by two male devotees and extended his arm for what
turned out to be a very limp handshake.


A short, overweight man with a round face and a pencil-thin
moustache, Maharaj Ji, as he is known to his followers, looked a lot
like the statues of Buddha they used to sell in the asian handicrafts
shops around
Melbourne in the early seventies.


His blue business suit seemed slightly incongruous garb for a guru
though this was no doubt simply prejudice. There is no earthly reason
why a messenger of the Almighty ought to be dressed in a loincloth. [ed
-- thank
God for that!]


Mr Young, a former pop star and the host of the long running
television programme "Young Talent Time", has been a devotee of Maharaj
Ji for almost five years now. What this means is that Mr. Young has
received the
"knowledge" and has experienced the divine light, which the guru
insists lies dormant in all human beings.


"It has changed my life," he said as we waited for Maharaj Ji to
arrive. "He taught me to look within myself for the source of
everything, including love. I had searched for meaning in the outside
world when, all the
time, all the answers were inside me."


"He is very special to me because he is my teacher. I love him, not
because he is a god or anything like that, but because of what he has
given me the opportunity to experience. Ask him what questions you like
but treat
him with respect."

Maharaj Ji sat down after the handshake and waited for the
questions. No doubt he expected to be asked about his financial
position, about the allegations of brainwashing, about the structure of
his organization, the
Divine Light Mission.


But there seemed little point in asking those questions. If Maharaj
Ji was an authentic prohpet or perfect master who could be included in
the same league as Buddha, Krishna, Moses and several others, did it
really
matter that his followers booked him into the Hilton Hotel for his stay
in Melbourne? Did it matter that he lived with his American wife and
two children in a nice house in Florida?


So the job ahead was really to establish whether Maharaj Ji was a
messenger of the Almighty or not. This seemed like an awesome task, an
impossible task in fact, given that he had only about an hour before
his next
interview. The best we could do was to allow him to state his case and
this he did pretty efficiently.


I have no doctrine to preach," he said, revealing the broad American
accent he had acquired by living in the United States for the past
decade. "I am a guide, a teacher, who can show people how to look
inside themselves
for the source of all things.


"The source of this divine light as we call it, is inside everyone
and has been spoken about by all the great prophets throughout history.
I am the messenger in this age chosen to spread the knowledge. There
can be only
one messenger at any particular time, though there have been many
before me.


"The people who accepted my role as guide and teacher are not fools
who have been brainwashed. They are intelligent human beings who live
normal lives, have families, work at their jobs, but who have
experienced
something that has changed their lives."


Like most prophets, false and otherwise, Maharaj Ji tends to talk in
parables. Asked why some people are open to inner experience while
others tend to think it is mumbo jumbo, he said that if a man is
thirsty there is no
point in offering him a plate of spaghetti and if he is hungry, there
is no point in giving him a glass of water.


"I'm not seeking recruits," he said. "I am here for people who have
searched everywhere, for answers, for the truth, and have been
unsatisfied. If they want to come to me, I am here to help them."


Maharaj Ji received the "knowledge" from his father in India when he
was six years old. His father had been a guru preaching the divine
light message to "millions of people" and had designated Maharaj Ji as
his successor
as perfect master before he died.

The late 1960s and early 1970s was a time when thousands of young,
essentially middle-class people from America, Western Europe and
Australia flocked to India in search of meaning, truth and cheap
marijuana. Some of them
found the boy guru and were impressed: they went back home to spread
his message and naturally asked him to visit them.


"I left India when I was 14 because some of the people I had met
asked me to come to London," Maharaj Ji said. "I stayed in London for a
while and then went to America. I am now an American citizen though I
spend most of
the year travelling around the world visiting my followers."


At 16, he married his 24-year-old American secretary, Marolyn
Johnston, a move which upset his mother who was still living in India.


She denounced Maharaj Ji as a playboy and suggested that his older
brother was, in fact, the person who had been chosen by his father to
succeed him as perfect master. Several attempts at a reconciliation
were made --
his mother even visited him in Florida -- but they came to nothing.


"I have no contact with my mother or brother," he said. "They live
in India and I think she was upset that I married a foreigner. She
thought I had married out of my caste or something like that."


At 24, Maharaji claims to have something like a million followers in
India, South America, the United States and Australia. He admits that
many of them almost worship him. He does not ask them to do this.


"I do not ask people to put me on a pedestal," he said. "But I am
their teacher and guide and they love me. I love them too. Did Jesus
ask to be put on a pedestal? Of course not. His people were so grateful
and loved him
so much that they wanted to do anything for him. Of course I am not
saying that I am Jesus."


The trouble with this is that it's all words. Can Maharaj Ji prove
that he is what he says he is? Obviously, he cannot. He can point to
his followers and say they are the proof. But then so can countless
other gurus.
This man has charisma and presence. He knows all about alienation and a
world gone mad. Don't we all?


Guru Maharaj Ji may well be a messenger of the Almighty but his claim seems far from proven.








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