Maharishi sees Peace Palaces; others see pipe dreams
Past failures raise questions about local development plans
Sunday, January 07, 2007
Amanda Garrett
Plain Dealer Reporter

When the Maharishi bought a fading Avon Lake resort in 1993, his
people promised not only to revive the former hot spot but also to
reduce area crime by meditating.

Two months later, when Maharishi bought a shuttered Holiday Inn in the
shadow of Thistledown race track, his people said they wanted to
reopen the 10-story tower as a class hotel catering to nonsmoking, non
drinking vegetarians. Neither plan ever materialized.

The Maharishi's company let both properties languish for years,
racking up building code violations and back taxes. At the Avon Lake
site, not only didn't the tenants prevent crimes, they often committed
them. Ultimately, the properties were sold, but only after frustrated
officials threatened to take both sites via eminent domain.

Now Maharishi - undaunted by his past failures, both to his own
enterprise and to the community - is again asking Greater Clevelanders
to have faith.

Maharishi wants to open 3,000 so-called Peace Palaces around the
world, including three in our area. His organization already has paid
millions for property in Mayfield Heights and Parma and is firming up
deals on parcels in Strongsville and Brecksville.

What's the giggling guru up to?

Maharishi has shrewdly shaped and reshaped his message since the
Beatles embraced him as their spiritual leader four decades ago.

Among other things, he opened an accredited university in Iowa,
promised tantalizing superhuman powers, vowed to bring world peace and
launched a political party, which in 2004 endorsed Cleveland
Congressman Dennis Kucinich's bid for the presidency. He also amassed
a fortune estimated between $5 billion and $9 billion with his web of
businesses and charities.

His latest strategy is to do for yogic flying what Starbucks has done
for a cup of coffee. His chain of Peace Palaces will sell $2,500
classes to study Maharishi's trademarked Transcendental Meditation, a
myriad of his health remedies, and Maharishi-driven architectural
consultation aimed at lassoing all of Earth's powers.

Two local palaces -- in Mayfield Heights and Parma -- also include
plans for private high schools, each teaching 160 teens everything
from algebra to inner consciousness.

And in Brecksville, where the group is negotiating to buy a 48-acre
parcel across from the VA hospital, Maharishi hopes to teach medical
doctors ancient forms of alternative health care because he believes
modern medicine has failed.

So is Maharishi selling religion? A cult? A pile of rubbish?

People have been trying to figure that out for a long time.

The 1960s:

Beatles' spiritual guide

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi was born in central India some time between 1911
and 1918. The precise date -- as with so many parts of Maharishi's
life -- has never been clear. He graduated with a physics degree from
an Indian university and then moved into the Himalayas where he
studied with a guru.

What happened next is murky, but Maharishi emerged in the West during
the late 1950s and later found rock-star fame in the mid-1960s as the
spiritual guide of the Beatles.

The Fab Four later renounced Maharishi as a fraud, but it didn't
matter. The surging counterculture had already embraced Maharishi and
an earlier appearance on "The Tonight Show" had cemented his place in
pop culture.

Maharishi's message was inspirational:

"Life is bliss."

"Man is born to enjoy."

"Within everyone is an unlimited reservoir of energy, intelligence,
and happiness."

Transcendental Meditation -- or TM -- was the key, Maharishi said.

The TM technique was so simple anyone could do it, Maharishi said. But
to learn, you had to take classes from a certified TM teacher. In the
late 1960s, an introductory course cost less than $100. Thousands
signed up.

And Maharishi's spiritual and financial empire was born.

The '70s and '80s:

Is TM a religion?

TM was so popular, even parts of the U.S. government bought in, said
the Rev. J. Gordon Melton, who directs the Institute for the Study of
American Religion in California.

During TM's peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Maharishi was
awash in government grants to teach TM in the Army and many schools,
Melton said.

Then someone asked the inevitable: Is TM a religion?

A U.S. federal court said it was in a tax case ruling. U.S. government
funding suddenly dried up. "It was a major blow to TM," Melton said.

Maharishi knew he needed something else to make TM work in the United
States. In the early 1980s, he tweaked his message.

The guru re-introduced TM as a hybrid cross between spirituality and
science -- some would say pseudo-science. And for the first time,
Maharishi promised TM could not only bring peace, but also unleash
super powers.

Human brain-wave physiology was the computer hardware of the cosmic
computer, he said. If programmed correctly -- through the advance
study of TM -- humans could fly like birds, become invisible and
harness the strength of elephants.

Skeptics clamored.

But John Hagelin -- a respected physicist who earned his doctorate at
Harvard -- wasn't among them. Hagelin signed on to chair the physics
program at a university Maharishi had established in a tiny Iowa farm
town.

"Really significant shifts in paradigm, such as those associated with
. . . this more universal view of consciousness, have often required a
new generation of scientists," Hagelin told the Chicago Tribune in 1985.

Hoping to prove TM worked, Maharishi believers took a very public
stance -- and chance. Legions of TM experts -- called yogic fliers --
moved to the nation's capital, claiming their twice-daily meditation
would lower the city's soaring crime rate.

It obviously didn't work.

About the same time, a few disappointed TM students sued and won after
studying yogic flying but never taking flight.

"It wasn't substantial money," religious scholar Melton said, "but all
of the sudden, TM's credibility in the U.S. was called into account."

The 1990s:

Foray into politics

TM next emerged in the United States in the early 1990s with a new
strategy -- politics.

Maharishi's followers formed the Natural Law Party and 800 delegates
held their first convention in April 1992 in Washington, D.C.,
selecting Hagelin, the Harvard-trained physicist, as the party's
presidential candidate.

Hagelin was pummeled, but the Natural Law Party grew, running hundreds
of candidates across the nation, including 53 in Ohio in 1996 alone.

Maharishi made new financial moves, too. In the early 1990s, he began
buying up hotels and resorts across the United States, from Denver to
Hartford, Conn.

Locally, he bought the Aqua Marine Resort -- a once-swanky hotel,
restaurant and 18-hole golf course in Avon Lake -- for $1.5 million in
August 1993. Two months later, he picked up the former Holiday Inn in
North Randall for $1.4 million.

Both properties had seen better days. But Maharishi's representatives
said they planned renovations at both sites. They envisioned
first-class hotels that would cater to TM students.

Officials in Avon Lake and North Randall soon realized that was
unlikely to happen.

Aqua Marine lost its liquor license and couldn't keep up with building
code violations.

In North Randall, the story was much the same. No one even mowed the
grass, recalled Chuck Horvath, the city's building commissioner. The
city considered citing the Maharishi people with fire code violations,
Horvath said, but the owners were scattered in eight different
countries beyond legal reach.

In 1996, North Randall launched an effort to seize the hotel by
eminent domain. Before the case reached court, the village settled
with Maharishi's people, buying the building. The village hoped to
tear it down and build a new village hall on the site. A downturn in
the economy delayed those plans. The vacant hotel still sits, boarded up.

Officials in Avon Lake also considered seizing the Aqua Marine, but a
developer ultimately moved in, bought the resort and razed it. Luxury
condos are now rising in its place, Mayor Robert Berner said last month.

If a Maharishi-connected business wanted to do business in Avon Lake
again, Berner said he would be leery. "They basically didn't do
anything they said they were going to do," Berner said.

The 21st century:

An emerging religion

In recent years, Maharishi -- now in his late 80s or early 90s -- has
continued to remake his movement. In 2002, he launched the Global
Country of World Peace, a borderless, imaginary land he said was
designed for peace-loving people everywhere.

Two years later, the Natural Law Party closed its U.S. headquarters
and Hagelin opened a branch of Maharishi's mythical country called the
U.S. Peace Government.

Hagelin based the capital on 480 acres in Kansas near the geographic
center of the United States -- a location selected according to
Maharishi teachings to maximize effectiveness.

According to the group's Web site -- uspeacegovernment.org -- the TM
group doesn't compete with the existing U.S. government. Instead, it
works as a complement, promoting peace and TM philosophies nationwide.

Part of that promotion is launching Peace Palaces -- 2,400 in the
United States. So far, at least four have opened: In Fairfield, Iowa;
Lexington, Ky.; Bethesda, Md.; and Houston. And Maharishi has bought
dozens of building sites.

But his harshest critics doubt many of the palaces will be built.

Rick Ross, who describes himself as a cult researcher, said that once
the aging guru's name is seared into the minds of a whole new
generation and he has brought in lots of money -- Maharishi is in the
midst of a $1 billion fund drive to build the Peace Palaces --
Maharishi will likely change course.

"My guess is in Cleveland . . . maybe you'll see one out of the three
Peace Palaces," said Ross, who believes this is just a money-making
scheme.

Thomas Murach, longtime director of the Maharishi Enlightenment Center
in Rocky River, insists Ross and other skeptics are mistaken.

"Maharishi always has a huge plan that's nearly incomprehensible,"
Murach said. When the Maharishi bought the old Holiday Inn and Aqua
Marine Resort he was merely investing, said Murach, who managed the
local sites.

Now Maharishi is using the money he made from the sale of those
properties and many others to bankroll his new $10 trillion project,
Murach said.

In addition to building Peace Palaces, Murach said Maharishi has
leased "hundreds of millions of acres" of land in Brazil and plans to
hire poor people to grow food there using his farming techniques.

All of this -- the Brazil plantings, the Peace Palaces -- are a
culmination of everything Maharishi has worked for, said religious
scholar Melton.

"Maharishi wants to establish TM as dominant cultural force around the
world," Melton said, comparing it to what Evangelical Christians have
done in the United States.

Evangelicals run bookstores that sell everything from jewelry to CDs;
they have psychologists operating on a Christian platform;
creationists serve on school boards; and the religious right emerged
as a powerful lobbying force in Washington, D.C.

Maharishi wants to do the same thing with TM, Melton said. But about
80 percent of Americans are Christians. And there are 1,000 religious
groups fighting for the remaining 20 percent, Melton said.

Maharishi believes TM will win them over. Melton and others doubt it.

Most people who study TM end up abandoning it. Some followers believe
they learned something. And others, like the Beatles, leave disillusioned.

As John Lennon wrote after changing the name of a song he originally
called "Maharishi":

Sexy Sadie what have you done/You made a fool of everyone.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

agarrett at plaind.com, 216-999-4814 

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