I simply cannot wait to see how the TM and TMO apologists here deal with
this, and try to make excuses for it. Items I'd like to see them deal
with are highlighted in red below.

Can you say "We told you so?" We did, many times here on FFL. You didn't
listen.

The most fascinating part for me is that because of the "delayed
payment" scam, it is likely that the GCWP has ever paid out a single
penny of the $150 per month payments promised to the parents of these
runaway kids. And never will. That's a scheme that Maharishi himself
would have been proud of thinking up. Maybe he did.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson  wrote:
>
> This is the full article from Hi India - more detailed than the al
jazerra snipett - sordid stuff on the part of the TMO if true:
>
> Vedic Pandits go 'missing' in US, reports Hi India
> IANS  Chicago, January 26, 2014 | UPDATED 16:36 IST
>
> In a shocking revelation, as many as 163 Indians, most of them brought
to the US as teenagers from villages in northern India to be trained
into Vedic Pandits by two institutions set up by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
of transcendental meditation fame, appear to have gone missing over the
last 12 months.
>
> Of the 1,050 young Indians brought to the Maharishi Vedic City and the
Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, 163 - some of
them just 19 years old - have gone missing in the last one year, Hi
India, a Chicago-based weekly newspaper for the Indian community,
reported in its latest issue.
>
> Both the Vedic city and the university are owned by the late Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi's family. According to the report, the management running
these places did not even care to trace the missing people.
>
> Even the Global Country of World Peace (GCWP), one of the many
teaching centres set up by the India-born spiritual guru, does not know
about the plight or flight of these Vedic scholars called 'world peace
professionals'.
>
> "They have jumped the fence for immigration purposes or for chasing
their American Dream," the newspaper quoted the varsity bosses as
saying.
>
> The GCWP runs a Vedic Pandit programme claiming to "bring about peace
on earth where there will be no war".
>
> Under the project to recruit Maharishi Vedic Pandits, publicity
literature is distributed in Indian villages, mostly in Hindi speaking
areas, among people living under the poverty line. Children are enrolled
with the permission of their parents, who are promised that their wards
would be given education up to 12th standard, after which they would be
turned into Pandits or masters of the art of Hindu religious rites and
services.
>
> After some 10 to 15 years, the qualified Pandits are supposed to have
a choice to either remain with the organisation and make a living, or
leave the centre and work outside on their own.
>
> Investigations by Hi India have found that the kids of the programme,
enrolled at the tender age of five years, were rarely provided education
beyond fifth standard. After investigation by the newspaper, it came to
light that these Vedic Pandits were brought to the US from India and
were kept in makeshift trailer homes to be guarded by round-the-clock
guards.
>
> When contacted, most officials of the Maharishi's Fairfield complex
refused to comment. Only one of them suggested that these students might
have "run away for immigration purposes".
>
> According to one Pandit, before the visa application at the US embassy
in India, a contract is prepared and signed by the organization and the
concerned Pandit for rules, regulations and compensation. The Pandits
are initially sent to the US for two years, and thereafter, either their
visa is extended for six more months or they are sent back and recalled
for two more years.
>
> According to the report, a contract is drafted in English but the copy
is neither given to Pandits nor is it translated or explained to the
fifth-grader emigrants who do not even understand English. The contract
states that they will be given $50 compensation while in the US and
another $150 in India. This $150 is not given on a monthly basis to the
families of the Pandits but, rather, is considered as bond money.
>
> "If the Pandit 'behaves well', his so-called compensation for two
years is given to him or his family on his return from the US. The
contract is prepared in a way to obtain visa," the report said.
>
> According to the newspaper, if the management of the Vedic City finds
out that some Pandits are desperate to leave the US, a mock travel plan
is chalked out and the Pandits are taken in a van to Chicago's O'Hare
airport and dropped at the entry gate. After asking them to wait till
the aircraft arrives while the van driver goes around and comes back in
a short while.
>
> According to one Pandit who was about to flee, "some of the
strong-willed Pandits run away from the airport for better prospects and
the rest of them are picked up by the driver and taken back to the Vedic
City".
>
> According to sources in the Indian consulate in Chicago, in a
situation where an Indian passport holder is considered or presumed gone
missing and his passport is left behind, it has to be returned
immediately to the nearest Indian mission which has to also be informed
about the circumstances in which the Indian citizen went missing.
>
> The Chicago consulate, however, says the GCWP has never returned or
deposited any passport and neither has it shared any missing person
information. According the sheriff's department and police department of
Fairfield, Iowa, no missing person report has ever been filed by the
GCWP.
>
>
> Read more at:
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/vedic-pandits-go-missing-in-us/1/3399\
28.html
<http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/vedic-pandits-go-missing-in-us/1/339\
928.html>
>
> --------------------------------------------
> On Mon, 1/27/14, Joe geezerfreak@... wrote:
>
>  Subject: [FairfieldLife] The New Maharishi Effect: 10% Missing
Pundits
>  To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
>  Date: Monday, January 27, 2014, 3:52 PM
>
> 
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2014/01/indian-vedic-students-go-missing-u\
s-20141275127398488.html
<http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2014/01/indian-vedic-students-go-missing-\
us-20141275127398488.html>


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