You know as much as I do: they built this massive 5-star facility that was The Raj on steroids, and invited terminal patients from all over the world to come and get cured.
They died. Virtually all of them died. Not surprising since only the absolute, most hopeless cases were supposed to come in the first place as their last hope. It was meant to show the utter superiority of Maharishi Ayurveda Done Rightâ„¢ to the World. And... They died. Virtually all of them died. End of story. Maharishi told the Movement to just "walk away" from such a place of death and they did. The place is now just ruins. L ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote : I have never heard this story of the failure of TM ayurveda - got any details? -------------------------------------------- On Sat, 4/26/14, LEnglish5@... mailto:LEnglish5@... <LEnglish5@... mailto:LEnglish5@...> wrote: Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Brahmachari Girish Varma Ji is to be praised To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Date: Saturday, April 26, 2014, 5:15 PM I don't speak any Indian language, but none of the English reports I have seen (including the links below) say that Girish has that kind of wealth, only that he is part of a 12-member committee that has control of that wealth (12,000 acres). And of course, if you actually look at the figures, the estimates of how much the land is worth is obviously exaggerated: the largest single item is the old Maharishi Ayurveda complex which now lies in utter disrepair. In its hey-day, it was meant to be The Raj on a grand scale: a complex of hospitals and hostels with 3200 5-star hotel rooms meant to provide an absolutely nourishing environment for those unfortunate people who were deemed "terminal" by Western medicine but could be saved due to the miraculous superiority of Ayurvedic treatments. When the masses of terminally ill patients did what Western treatment said would happened, and died by the thousands, Maharishi told the TM movement to "walk away" from the halls of death (or words to that effect) and the complex fell into complete ruin. It ain't worth $1.5 billion and there's no way it will ever be because it wasn't built as a 5-star *resort* but as a 5-star *hospital* and there's no way 3200 tourists at-a-time are going to want to pay 5-star prices to say in that particular region for any length of time. Without the promised miracle cures of Ayurveda, it is a completely worthless venture. L