.. Sri Sri Ravi Shankar (Punditji)is well known in India and, 
increasingly, around the world as guru to the technology class. 

The guru has become hugely popular with India's urban elite and its 
growing community of technology graduates. These disciples say Sri 
Sri's approach to yogic breathing -- rhythmic breaths that flood the 
body with oxygen -- eases the intense pressures of their stress-
filled, competitive vocations and helps them find meaning in life 
beyond their jobs. It's a perfect solution for a generation that is 
breaking away from centuries of religious and family tradition. 
Rather than following the Hindu doctrine of penance and renunciation 
intertwined with past and future incarnations, Art of Living tells 
its generally well-heeled adherents to guiltlessly enjoy whatever 
wealth they accumulate and to live for the moment -- while giving 
back to society and letting the guru concern himself with their 
troubles. "It's a spiritual niche into which New Age, developing 
techies fit," says Rukmini Bhaya Nair, an Indian Institute of 
Technology professor who writes about the country's evolving tech 
culture.

Some 4 million people are active devotees of Sri Sri's sudarshan 
kriya breathing, which the savvy guru says he discovered while 
meditating for 10 days in 1982. The 47-year-old ascetic is a hot 
commodity on the lecture circuit and has spoken at U.N. events and 
the World Economic Forum. "Peacemakers are right here and 
everywhere -- within each one of us we can create that peace," the 
guru told world leaders gathered at Davos.

Some 1 million of his followers live outside India. In the San 
Francisco Bay area, for example, the number of practicing devotees 
has grown to 3,000 from 2,000 a year ago. It hasn't hurt that 
corporations such as Oracle (ORCL ) Sun Microsystems, and Cisco 
Systems have hired Art of Living teachers to conduct six-day 
seminars at $150 a head. "The knife of job loss is hanging over our 
heads. The fear leads people to join the courses," says Ravi Phatak, 
an Oracle engineer in San Francisco who runs Art of Living seminars.

The epicenter of Sri Sri's movement, though, is Bangalore. At Sri 
Sri's headquarters complex and ashram, located on 60 acres of lush 
hillside south of the city center, the guru has a brand-new building 
for his satsangs, or evening devotionals. After sundown, as many as 
3,000 followers gather in the great hall beneath a roof shaped like 
unfolding pink lotus petals with a glass dome at its center. If Sri 
Sri is in residence, he addresses his flock; when he's not in town, 
the congregation listens to tapes of him speaking. As the ceremony 
wears on, youthful devotees -- many of them with long hair and 
beards like their guru -- sway, sing, and chant into cordless 
microphones.

Bangalore's legions of young engineers, struggling with the friction 
between India's traditional culture and their new role as players in 
a global industry, eat it up. 

Art of Living gatherings may look like a hippie nostalgia tour, but 
they're smart business. Bangalore tech consultants estimate that the 
group took in $10 million in revenues last year. Art of Living says 
it invests much of that money in giving free courses to prisoners in 
India, the U.S., and Europe, and for rural-development programs in 
India and South Africa. Sri Sri leads an apparently simple life, 
owning almost nothing, wearing Spartan white or saffron robes, and 
living in a one-room cottage in his ashram when he's not traveling 
to tend to his global flock.

The son of a middle-class social worker, Sri Sri received a B.A. in 
science from a college in Bangalore. Upon graduation, he looked into 
a career at a Calcutta state-sector bank. Instead, Sri Sri became a 
disciple of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the Indian who introduced 
Transcendental Meditation to the West in the 1960s. Soon, Sri Sri 
had risen to become manager of the guru's foreign operations -- 
where he learned a thing or two about networking and marketing.

When Sri Sri struck out on his own, he knew just how to spread the 
word about his breathing program: through endorsements from 
socialites, fashion models, business leaders, and members of 
Parliament. His followers aggressively pitched the guru's message to 
corporations in India and, later, overseas. Art of Living 
is "ancient wisdom made contemporary," says K.B. Seshadri, global 
sales director of iFlex Solutions, a Bangalore software 
house. "There's no reading of scriptures. It's practical."

It's also an opportunity to be included in a club where not just 
techies but India's rich, famous, and beautiful play, critics note. 
It's "a far easier membership to acquire than the snobby Bangalore 
Club," the city's elite, ex-colonial country club, says tech 
consultant Chiranjit Banerjee. Sri Sri counters that Art of Living 
serves a far more important purpose than any social club. "Every 
intelligent person has a spiritual quest," he said in response to e-
mailed questions. "Art of Living creates the conditions whereby the 
quest can be nurtured. It is not a luxury item but has become a 
basic necessity in today's world."

As long as India -- and Silicon Valley -- keep minting new software 
engineers, Sri Sri will be there to help them find their spiritual 
way. 



> --- 
> 
> Way cool.
> What is a Punditji?





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