From: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com [mailto:fairfieldl...@yahoogroups.com]
On Behalf Of William108
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 1:44 PM
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Book Review: Under The Thumb Of Cult Leader Sri
Chinmoy
 

In light of this revealing book on Sri Chinmoy, I guess we'll start seeing a
spate of  books on the "true" MMY and his organization soon.
By the way, is Dana Sawyer still working on his book about MMY and the TM
org. and, if so, does anyone know when it will be published.
 
I just shot him an email and I'll post his response.
  

--- On Wed, 4/22/09, Rick Archer <r...@searchsummit.com> wrote:
From: Rick Archer <r...@searchsummit.com>
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Book Review: Under The Thumb Of Cult Leader Sri
Chinmoy
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, April 22, 2009, 1:20 PM
UNDER THE THUMB OF CULT LEADER SRI CHINMOY
By Krystle M. Davis
Forbes.com
April 14, 2009

http://www.forbes. com/2009/ 04/14/jayanti- tamm-carwheels-
<http://www.forbes.com/2009/04/14/jayanti-tamm-carwheels-sari-opinions-book-
r>  sari-opinions- book-r
eviews-cults- sri-chinmoy. html

............

Book Review:
Jayanti Tamm's ''Cartwheels in a Sari"

Purchase on Amazon:
http://www.amazon. com/exec/ obidos/ASIN/ 0307393925/
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0307393925/newheavenneweart>
newheavenneweart

............

Cults are notorious for convincing people to do the unthinkable. In March, a
member of the now-defunct One Mind Ministries pleaded guilty to starving her
son to death. Allegedly, she and other cult members stopped feeding the
1-year-old because he wouldn't say "amen" at mealtime.

Back in 1993, David Koresh's Branch Davidian sect ended in a conflagration
after a 51-day standoff with the FBI. In 1978, over 900 members of the
People's Temple died at Jonestown, Guyana, in a mass murder-suicide; and in
1997, scores of Heaven's Gate followers killed themselves in California.

But not all cult members' stories end so tragically.

In her fascinating new memoir, Cartwheels in A Sari, Jayanti Tamm describes
growing up in a cult within mainstream America -- and how she eventually
managed to break free. With a succinct and earnest writing style, Tamm
delivers a coming-of-age story overflowing with heartbreaking and hilarious
moments.

Read his 2007 New York Times obituary <http://bit.ly/ X41HO
<http://bit.ly/X41HO> >, and Sri Chinmoy
comes across as a kind-hearted spiritual leader who championed world peace
through his art, music and athleticism. His meditation center's Web site
<http://www.srichinm <http://www.srichinmoycentre.org/>  oycentre. org/>
likens him to Jesus Christ, Buddha and
Krishna. Well into his 70s, crowds gathered to watch the old man's extreme
weightlifting feats, which included lifting an airplane (with the help of an
apparatus).

Celebrity followers have included Olympian Carl Lewis and musicians Carlos
Santana and Roberta Flack. And a host of prominent people -- Nelson Mandela,
Bill Clinton and Princess Diana, to name a few -- have applauded Chinmoy's
dedication to promoting unity and world peace.

Tamm, on the other hand, depicts a charlatan who masqueraded as a god and
convinced hundreds of thousands to worship him. Her parents were among the
first disciples. Chinmoy arranged a "divine marriage" between a
Yale-educated hippie and a single mother, then told them to practice
abstinence. (Most disciples, however, were directed to remain single.) When
Tamm's parents disobeyed and conceived her, Chinmoy invented a myth to
explain her birth. He declared her the "Chosen One," a miracle child he'd
selected to be his most devoted follower.

When she was a year old, Tamm's family moved to Connecticut and opened a
meditation center in their basement. She writes, "The sole point of
everything was Guru ... Our house felt like a Guru museum, replete with
photo gallery -- pictures of Guru occupied every single free space upon the
wall."

>From Tamm's description of Chinmoy, it's hard to help but draw parallels to
Warren Jeffs, the imprisoned leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints, whose picture still adorns the walls of
classrooms on the Yearning for Zion ranch in Texas.

Tamm says the guru always had the last word in her household. TV was mostly
forbidden, but she was allowed to watch The Muppet Show and Little House on
the Prairie. The guru disparaged education, so instead of doing her
homework, she spent hours memorizing aphorisms and songs he wrote. Consuming
alcohol, caffeine and meat; dancing; sex and dating; socializing with
outsiders; and owning pets were prohibited.

But the guru contradicted himself and made hypocritical decisions. Despite
his ban on pets, as a preteen, Tamm worked long, unpaid hours during the
summer cleaning cages in Chinmoy's Queens basement, where he kept his
collection of exotic pets from around the world.

She also says the guru controlled his pupils by pitting them against one
another. He created a caste system that allowed him to demote or promote
members at will. He encouraged members to keep tabs on one another and turn
in rule-breakers. Tamm says he once held a fundraiser where disciples paid
$25 apiece to hear him describe their worst qualities. At one meditation
session, he held a contest for the ugliest girl -- a young member with a
boil on her face won the distinction.

When Tamm was ejected repeatedly for dating, she felt compelled to beg for
forgiveness and return to the organization. But at 25, she was so unhappy
that she attempted suicide, and Chinmoy banned her permanently without
explanation.

Tamm's memoir is the first book to document Chinmoy's life and expose the
insular existence his followers adopted. As Tamm notes, the 7,000 current
members worldwide, and countless others who have encountered Chinmoy, are
likely to have had different experiences and perceptions. She doesn't
pretend to have the definitive story. But her account reveals a great deal.

............

Wikipedia on Sri Chinmoy:
http://en.wikipedia <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri_Chinmoy>  .org/wiki/
Sri_Chinmoy

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