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{{short description|Religious movement, founded in 1970 by Nirmala Srivastava}}{{pp-dispute|small=yes}} | |||
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{{Yogaschool|name=Sahaja Yoga | |||
{{Infobox yoga school | |||
|color=#174803 | |||
| name = Sahaja Yoga | |||
|bgcolor=white | |||
| color = #174803 | |||
|religious_origins=], ] | |||
| image = | |||
|regional_origins=], ] | |||
| religious_origins = ]universal | |||
|founding_guru=] | |||
| regional_origins = ], India | |||
|popularity=Growing from the late 20th century, present in "nearly 100 countries"<ref name="centres"/> | |||
| founding_guru = ] (aka Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi) | |||
|derivatives= | |||
| popularity = Growing from the late 20th century, present in "more than 100 countries"<ref name="centres" /> | |||
|related_schools=], ], ] | |||
| founding_year = 5 May 1970 | |||
|practice_emphases=] ], ], ]<!-- Let's leave out contentious elements: ]<ref></ref>, ]<ref></ref> --> | |||
| derivatives = | |||
|other_topics= ], ], ] | |||
| related_schools = | |||
| practice_emphases = ], ], ]<ref name="sahajayoga">{{cite web |url=http://www.sahajayoga.org/experienceitnow/ |title=Experience Your Self Realization |website=sahajayoga.org |publisher=Vishwa Nirmala Dharma |date=12 June 2006 |access-date=26 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111119205947/http://www.sahajayoga.org/experienceitnow/ |archive-date=19 November 2011}}</ref> | |||
| other_topics = ] | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Sahaja Yoga (सहज योग)''' is a religion founded in 1970 by ] (1923–2011).<ref>{{Cite book |title=Encyclopedia of Religion |publisher=Macmillan Reference USA |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-02-865997-8 |editor-last=Jones |editor-first=Lindsey |edition=2nd |location=Detroit }}</ref> Nirmala Srivastava is known as Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi (trans: ''Revered Immaculate Mother'') or simply as "Mother" by her followers, who are called Sahaja yogis.<ref name=coney1999>{{cite book |title=Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Movement |last=Coney |first=Judith |publisher=Curzon Press |year=1999 |isbn=0-7007-1061-2 |location=Richmond }}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite news |url=http://archive.indianexpress.com/news/sahaja-yoga-founder-nirmala-devi-is-dead/754645/ |title=Sahaja Yoga founder Nirmala Devi is dead |date=25 February 2011 |work=The Indian Express |publisher=Express News Service |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170505165610/http://archive.indianexpress.com/news/sahaja-yoga-founder-nirmala-devi-is-dead/754645 |archive-date=5 May 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
'''Sahaja Yoga''' is a ] founded by ], more widely known as 'Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi' and affectionately as 'Mother' by her followers (Sahaja Yogis). The movement says that Sahaja Yoga uses a process of ] ] to produce ], experienced as a cool breeze and thoughtless awareness.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org.in/SYIntro.asp a unique living process</ref> | |||
Practitioners believe that during meditation they experience a state of self-realization produced by ] awakening, and that this is accompanied by the experience of thoughtless awareness or mental silence.<ref name="Sahaja Yoga Book 1">{{Cite book |first=Nirmala |last=Srivastava |author-link=Nirmala Srivastava |title=Sahaja Yoga Book One |edition=2nd |publisher=Nirmala Yoga |year=1989 |location=Australia }}{{npsn|date=July 2019}}{{Page needed|date=April 2014}}</ref> | |||
Sahaja Yoga started in India and England (where Nirmala Srivastava moved in 1974) and there are now Sahaja Yoga centers in almost 100 countries worldwide.<ref name="centres"> ''A message for one and all... '' Monday, Apr 07, 2003 viewed 6 November 2006</ref> The Sahaja Yoga organization is known as '''Vishwa Nirmala Dharma''' (Universal Pure Religion)<ref></ref> or '''Sahaja Yoga International'''. | |||
Shri Mataji described Sahaja Yoga as the pure, universal religion integrating all other religions.<ref name=coney1999/> She claimed that she was a divine incarnation,<ref name="inform" /> more precisely an ] of the Holy Spirit, or the ] of the Hindu tradition, the great mother goddess who had come to save humanity.<ref name=coney1999/><ref name=kakar/> This is also how she is regarded by most of her devotees.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web |url=http://www.sahajayoga.org/propheciesfulfillments/default.asp |title=Prophecies and Fulfillments |date=7 May 2017 |website=Sahaja Yoga Meditation |publisher=Vishwa Nirmala Dharma |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170512133138/http://www.sahajayoga.org/propheciesfulfillments/default.asp |archive-date=12 May 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> Sahaja Yoga has sometimes been characterized as a ].<ref name=be-advisory/><ref name="jma" /> | |||
Sahaja Yoga has been a subject of criticism and has been associated with a number of problems, some arising from "Sahaja Yoga's emphasis on complete devotion to Nirmala Srivastava".<ref name="inform" /> Various sources have also described Sahaja Yoga as a ]. | |||
== |
== Etymology == | ||
The word ']' in Sanskrit has two components: 'Saha' is 'with' and 'ja' is 'born'.<ref name="inform">{{cite web |url=http://www.inform.ac/node/8 |title=Meditation and Mindfulness |last=INFORM staff |website=INFORM – the information network on religious movements |access-date=9 May 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170704025132/http://www.inform.ac/node/8 |archive-date=4 July 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> ''A Dictionary of Buddhism'' gives the literal translation of Sahaja as "innate" and defines it as "denoting the natural presence of enlightenment (bodhi) or purity",<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |year=2004 |title=Sahaja |encyclopedia=A Dictionary of Buddhism |publisher=Oxford University Press |url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605607.001.0001/acref-9780198605607-e-1532 |isbn=978-0-19-172653-8 |access-date=27 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140528010242/http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605607.001.0001/acref-9780198605607-e-1532 |archive-date=28 May 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> and ] means ''union'' ''with the divine'' and refers to a spiritual path or a state of spiritual absorption. According to a book published by Sahaja Yogis, Sahaja Yoga means ''spontaneous'' and ''born with you'' meaning that the kundalini is born within us and can be awakened spontaneously, without effort.<ref name="Sahaja Yoga Book 1" /> | |||
The term 'Sahaja Yoga' goes back at least to the 15th Century Indian mystic ]<ref>{{cite journal |last=Ray |first=Nihar Ranjan |date=October 2000 |title=The concept of 'Sahaj' in Guru Nanak's theology |url=http://www.sikhreview.org/october2000/theology.htm |journal=The Sikh Review |volume=48 |number=562 |access-date=26 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927011616/http://www.sikhreview.org/october2000/theology.htm |archive-date=27 September 2011}}</ref> and has also been used to refer to ].<ref>{{cite book |title=Sar Bachan: An Abstract of the Teachings of Soami Ji Maharaj, the Founder of the Radha Soami System of Philosophy and Spiritual Science: The Yoga of the Sound Current |publisher=Radha Soami Satsang Beas |others=Translated by Sardar Sewa Singh and Julian P. Johnson |year=1934 |location=Beas, India |author=Soami Ji Maharaj |author-link=Shiv Dayal Singh}}{{Page needed|date=April 2014}}</ref> can also mean 'comfortable', 'natural', or 'uncomplicated' in Hindi. | |||
The word ']' in Sanskrit has two components: saha meaning 'with' and ja meaning 'born'.<ref name="inform"> published by </ref> Sahaja means ''natural'', ''simple'' or ''innate''<ref></ref> and ] means ''union'' or ''yoking'' and refers to a spiritual path or a state of spiritual absorption. | |||
== History == | |||
The term 'Sahaja Yoga' goes back at least to the 15th Century Indian mystic ].<ref></ref> It has also been used as a synonym for ]<ref> "This approach has gone under many names such as siddha yoga, sahaja yoga, mahayoga or siddha mahayoga."</ref> and ].<ref>Singh, S. S., & Johnson, J. P. (Translators). (1934). ''Sar Bachan: An abstract of the teachings of Soami Ji Maharaj, the founder of the Radha Soami system of philosophy and spiritual science: The yoga of the Sound Current''. Beas, India: Radha Soami Satsang Beas.</ref> The term is also used to describe the basic meditation practice of ].<ref></ref> ] (aka ]) also answered a question on 'Sahaja Yoga' on the afternoon of 5 May 1970 at a meditation camp in ]<ref>], "Sahaja yoga is the most difficult of the yogas, because there is nothing more difficult than to be sahaja -- effortless, natural and spontaneous. What is the meaning of sahaja? Sahaja means: let whatever happens happen, don't resist it. Of course, it is the best, but it is also very difficult. Because nothing is more difficult for man than to be natural..." </ref> attended by Nirmala Srivastava.<ref>Coney, Judith (1999) ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'', (London: Curzon Press) ISBN 0-7007-1061-2 p 220</ref><ref> Indian Skeptic (1990, June) Vol 2 No 2</ref> | |||
Before starting Sahaja Yoga, Srivastava had a reputation as a spiritual healer.<ref name=kakar/>{{rp|211–212}} In 1970, with a small group of devotees around her, she began spreading her message of Sahaja Yoga in India. As she moved with her husband to London, UK, she continued her religious activities there, and the movement grew and spread throughout Europe, by the mid-80's reaching North America. In 1989, Shri Mataji made her first trip to Russia and Eastern Europe.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |title=Encyclopedia of American religions |last=Melton |first=J. Gordon |publisher=Gale |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-7876-6384-1 |edition=8th |location=Detroit |pages=1005}}</ref> She did not charge for her classes, insisting that her lesson was a birthright which should be freely available to all.<ref name="funding">{{cite news |first=Michael |last=Posner |url=http://v1.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20110311.OBDEVIATL/BDAStory/BDA/deaths |newspaper=] | title=Spiritual leader founded Sahaja yoga movement |date=11 March 2011 |access-date=19 March 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717002037/http://v1.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20110311.OBDEVIATL/BDAStory/BDA/deaths |archive-date=17 July 2011 |url-status=live}}</ref> As of 2021, Sahaja Yoga has centers in at least 69 countries.<ref>{{cite web|title=Sahaja Yoga Worldwide Contacts – Locate Sahaja Yoga Near You|url=https://www.sahajayoga.org/worldwidecontacts/phonelist.asp|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210226154220/https://www.sahajayoga.org/worldwidecontacts/phonelist.asp|archive-date=26 February 2021|access-date=21 April 2021|website=sahajayoga.org}}</ref> | |||
== Beliefs and practices== | |||
In 2000 the term 'Sahaja Yoga' was trademarked in the ] by Vishwa Nirmala Dharma.<ref>'G & S: educational services, namely, conducting classes, workshops and seminars in the field of techniques of meditation, relaxation and self-improvement. FIRST USE: 19700000. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 19730000'' Filing Date: March 2, 1999, (REGISTRANT) Dharma, Vishwa Nirmala NONPROFIT RELIGIOUS CORPORATION CALIFORNIA 15445 VENTURA BLVD., #900 SHERMAN OAKS CALIFORNIA 91403 </ref> In 2001 a complaint by Vishwa Nirmala Dharma to the ] regarding the use of a domain name using the term was rejected (despite the dissenting opinion of the presiding panelist), in part due to the determination that 'sahajayoga' is not only a descriptive Sanskrit word but is also a concept dating back to Buddhism adopted by saint ] and then also taken up by ] in ]'<ref> ADMINISTRATIVE PANEL DECISION 'Vishwa Nirmala Dharma a.k.a. Sahaja Yoga v. Sahaja Yoga Ex-Members Network and SD Montford' Case No. D 2001-0467</ref> There has recently been 'significant' expenditure by Vishwa Nirmala Dharma to legally protect the term in Europe.<ref></ref> | |||
The movement claims Sahaja Yoga is different from other yoga/meditations because it begins with self realization through kundalini awakening rather than as a result of performing ] techniques or ]. This self realization is said to be made possible by the presence of Srivastava often through a photograph of her.<ref name="Sahaja Yoga Book 1"/> The teachings, practices and beliefs of Sahaja Yoga are mainly ]-based, with a predominance of elements from mystical traditions, as well as local customs of India.<ref name=kakar/><ref name=coney1999/> There are however elements of ] origin, such as the eternal battle between good and evil.<ref name=kakar/><ref name=coney1999/> References to a variety of other religious, spiritual, mystical as well as modern scientific frameworks are also interwoven in Srivastava's teachings, although to a lesser degree.<ref name=kakar/><ref name=coney1999/> | |||
Religious sociologist Judith Coney<ref>{{cite book |page=289 |chapter=Contributors |title=The South Asian Religious Diaspora in Britain, Canada, and the United States (SUNY Series in Religious Studies |veditors=Coward HG |year=2000 |publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=0791445100}}</ref> has reported facing a challenge in getting behind what she called "the public facade" of Sahaja Yoga.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|214}} She described Sahaja yogis as adopting a low profile with uncommitted individuals to avoid unnecessary conflict.<ref name=cnr>{{cite book |first=Judith |last=Coney |title=Children in New Religions |editor1-first=Susan J. |editor1-last=Palmer |editor2-first=Charlotte |editor2-last=Hardman |publisher=] | year=1999 |isbn=978-0-8135-2620-1 }}</ref> | |||
==Beliefs== | |||
Coney observed that the movement tolerates a variety of world views and levels of commitment with some practitioners choosing to remain on the periphery.<ref name=coney1999/> | |||
Coney reported hearing a number of Sahaja Yogi speakers at a national puja "talk about the ways in which they disguised some of their beliefs when in contact with non-members." She also reports facing a challenge in getting Sahaja Yogis to let her "get behind the public facade."<ref>Judith Coney, ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'' (1999) p214</ref> Coney wrote that because "established devotees are usually prepared to discuss their more 'advanced' beliefs only with people who have followed the practices laid out by Sri Mataji for some time, Sahaja Yogis at different stages of membership have recourse to different amounts of information."<ref>Judith Coney, ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'' (1999) p43</ref> | |||
=== Kundalini === | |||
It is sometimes suggested that Sahaja Yoga beliefs, seen as re-discovered ancient knowledge by Sahaja Yogis, be treated as hypothesis until found to be truth.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> On the other hand, ] has stated that "the method of science is not employed in Sahaja Yoga" as it "is already researched."<ref>], Doctor's Conference, 7 August 1993, ] "I call Sahaja Yoga as meta science because the method of science is not employed in Sahaja Yoga, e. g. in the medical science when we want to search something then we take a hypothesis. We think possibly this might be the solution of a particular disease... Unless we know what are we made of and what is our inner being, and how these diseases are caused, we will not be able to do some thing accurately. Specially allopathic medicines are very heat creating. So we have to take something to neutralise the heat that is also another blind alley, Sahaja Yoga is a meta science. Here you do not have to research anything. It is already researched and we do not have to go working hard for it for years"</ref> | |||
{{Further |Kundalini}} | |||
Within the Indian mystic tradition, kundalini awakening has long been a much sought-after goal that was thought rare and hard to attain.<ref name=kakar/> Sahaja Yoga is distinctive in claiming to offer a quick and easy path to such an awakening.<ref name=kakar>{{cite book |author=Sudhir Kakar |author-link=Sudhir Kakar |title=Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and its Healing Traditions |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=0226422798 |year=1991 }}{{rp|191}}</ref> | |||
=== |
=== Meditation === | ||
] is one of the foundational rituals within Sahaja Yoga.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|71}} The technique taught emphasises the state of "thoughtless-awareness" that is said to be achieved.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/decisions/html/2001/d2001-0467.html |title=Administrative Panel Decision 'Vishwa Nirmala Dharma a.k.a. Sahaja Yoga v. Sahaja Yoga Ex-Members Network and SD Montford' Case No. D 2001-0467 |date=16 June 2001 |publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
=== Role of women === | |||
Sahaja Yoga, like many Eastern and ] systems, believes that in addition to our physical body there is a ] comprised of ] (channels) and ] (energy centers). Kakar writes that ]'s additions to this widespread traditional ']' model include giving it a scientific, neurological veneer, the elaboration of the health aspects and the introduction of notions of traditional Christian morality.<ref>Kakar, Sudhir (1984) ''Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and Its Healing Traditions'', ISBN 0-226-42279-8 p196 "Essentially, Mataji's model of the human psyche is comprised of the traditional tantric and hatha yoga notions of the subtle body, with its 'nerves' and 'centers,' and fueled by a pervasive 'subtle energy' that courses through both the human and the divine, through the body and the cosmos. Mataji's contributions to this ancient model are not strikingly original: as a former medical student she has sought to give it a scientific, neurological veneer; as a former faith healer, she has elaborated upon those aspects of the model that are concerned with sickness and health; as someone born into an Indian Christian family she has tried to introduce notions of traditional Christian morality into an otherwise amoral Hindu view of the psyche."</ref> Kakar also writes that Nirmala Srivastava, "following the theories of Vasant Rele, equates ] with the parasympathetic nervous system, ] with the left and ] with the right sides of the sympathetic nervous system and the chakras with the plexuses."<ref>Kakar, Sudhir (1984) ''Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and Its Healing Traditions'', ISBN 0-226-42279-8 p197</ref> | |||
Judith Coney has written that in general, Nirmala Srivastava's vision for the role of women within Sahaja Yoga was one of "feminine domesticity and compliance".<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|125}} | |||
Some parents of Sahaja 'yogists', analyzing Nirmala Srivastava's remarks, noted that women play a subordinate role.<ref name="jma" /> The texts of Nirmala Srivastava say that "if you are a woman and you want to dominate, then Sahaja Yoga will have difficulty in curing you" and that women should be "docile" and "domestic".<ref name="jma" /> Judith Coney writes that women "are valued as mothers and wives but are limited to these roles and are not encouraged to be active or powerful, except within the domestic sphere and behind the scenes".<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|125}} | |||
Sahaja Yoga teaches that there are seven main ]<ref></ref> and that each chakra possesses different qualities and looks after different aspects of our physical, mental, emotional and spiritual well being.<ref></ref> Disease is said to occur when the subtle qualities of the chakras are neglected or denied.<ref></ref> Each chakra has a presiding ] who may become deactivated in extreme cases causing cancer. <ref></ref> For example, the deities residing in the ] chakra are said to be ] and Adi ] and the chakra is said to be damaged by atheism and doubt in God<ref></ref> | |||
Coney has observed that "Gender roles for women and men within Sahaja Yoga are clearly specified and highly segregated, and positions of authority in the group are held almost exclusively by the men".<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|119}} Coney writes that the ideal of womanhood promoted within Sahaja Yoga draws both on the ideal wifely qualities of the goddess ] and on wider Hindu traditions. Coney believes these traditions are summed up in ] which holds that woman should be honoured and adorned but kept dependent on men in the family. Women are also described in this book as "dangerous" and needing to be guarded from temptation.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|121}} | |||
<!-- (see chart below for more) -->. | |||
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! # | |||
! Chakra<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.ca/ChakraPresentation/subtlesystem.htm</ref><ref>http://www.sahajayoga.com.au/book_one/ch-5-the-chakras/</ref> | |||
! Presiding deities | |||
! Physical aspect<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org.in/ScientificExplanation.asp</ref> | |||
! Associated colour | |||
! Associated qualities | |||
! Associated ] | |||
! Symbol | |||
|- style="background:rgb(255,255,255);" | |||
| 7 | |||
| Sahasrāra, सहस्रार | |||
| Adi Shakti/] <ref></ref>, ] <ref></ref> | |||
| Limbic area of the brain | |||
| White or Multicolored | |||
| ], ], ], Joy, ], ], Recognition, Knowledge | |||
| | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"|] | |||
|- style="background: #fffdcd;" | |||
| 6 | |||
| <br />Ajñā, आज्ञा (or Agnya) | |||
| ], ], Mahaganesha, Mahakartikeya <ref></ref> | |||
| Pineal and pituitary glands | |||
| ] | |||
| Thoughtless Awareness, Forgiveness of others and self, Morality | |||
| ] | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"|] | |||
|- style="background: #faf178;" | |||
|- style="background:#4670b6;" | |||
| 5 | |||
| Viśuddhi, विशुद्ध (Viśuddha) | |||
| ], ], ], ] <ref></ref> | |||
| Throat, neck, mouth, teeth, face, nose, tongue, ears and ankles | |||
| ] | |||
| Collectivity, Collective Communication, Self Respect/Confidence, Responsibility, Diplomacy, Witness Power, Freedom | |||
| ] | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"| | |||
|- style="background:#fd2523;" | |||
| 4 | |||
| Anāhata, अनाहत | |||
| ], ], ], ], ] <ref></ref> | |||
| Thymus, heart and lungs | |||
| ] | |||
| Security, Confidence, Immunity, ], Love, Joy, Benevolence, Father/Husband/Brother Relationships, ], Sincerity, Protection, Respect | |||
| ] | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"|] | |||
|- style="background:rgb(255,255,255);" | |||
|- style="background:#1db24b;" | |||
| 3 | |||
| ]/Manipura<br />{{unicode|maṇipūra}}, मणिपूर | |||
| ], ] <ref></ref> | |||
| Liver, stomach, intestines, spleen and pancreas | |||
| ] | |||
| Center of seeking, Satisfaction, Grace, Balance, Dignity, Generosity, Justice, Peace, Wealth, Household qualities, Respect for others. | |||
| ] | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"|] | |||
|- style="background:#faed23; | |||
| 2 | |||
| ]<br />{{unicode|svādhiṣṭhāna}}, स्वाधिष्ठान | |||
| ], ] <ref></ref> | |||
| Kidneys, liver, pancreas, spleen, lower abdomen | |||
| ] | |||
| ], ], ], Intellectual Perception, Pure Attention | |||
| ] | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"|] | |||
|- style="background:#eb3c24;" | |||
| 1 | |||
| Mūlādhāra, मूलाधार (Also Mooladhara) | |||
| ], ] <ref></ref> | |||
| Prostrate gland | |||
| ] (Indian red or coral red) | |||
| Innocence, Purity, Wisdom, Auspiciousness, Magnetism, Spontaneity (Sahaj), Power to raise the Kundalini | |||
| Earth | |||
|bgcolor="#f2f2f2"|] | |||
|} | |||
Coney has written that Nirmala Srivastava did not display consistent views on women but gave a number of messages about the status of women. On the one hand she said women are not inferior but described the sexes as complementary. Describing the man as the head of the family, she likened the woman's status to the heart: "The head always feels he decides, but the brain always knows that is the heart one has to cater, it is the heart which is all-pervading, it is the real source of everything".<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|122}} She regretted what she saw as the loss of respect for women in society in both the East and West. However, she viewed Western ] suspiciously, seeing it as a "route to damnation" because it required women to deviate from what she thought was their true nature.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|123}} | |||
<br clear="all"> | |||
--> | |||
=== Family === | |||
===Kundalini, Self Realization and vibratory awareness=== | |||
Human rights lawyer Sylvie Langlaude has described the configuration of families within Sahaja Yoga as having "a distinctive image and model of childhood", noting that from birth children become familiarised with the movement's beliefs and Nirmala Srivastava's status by being closely involved in its day-to-day rituals including meditation, foot-soaking, and devotional singing. This is in line with the other religions Langlaude examined, who concluded that "almost all traditions include informal nurturing within the family and slightly more formal nurturing within a religious community", and that children "are also initiated by their parents to a number of initiation rituals and to ceremonies and festivals."<ref name="law">{{cite book |author=Sylvie Langlaude |title=The Right of the Child to Religious Freedom in International Law |publisher=Brill |year=2007 |page=33-4 |chapter=Chapter 1: Religious Children}}</ref> | |||
=== The subtle system – chakras and nadis === | |||
Sahaja Yoga teaches that the ] can be balanced by awakening the ] in the ], which is conceived of as a normally dormant 'mother' energy. ] has said that the Kundalini is the reflection within us of the ] or Adi (Primordial) ]. ] has said that Kundalini "is the desire of God.... and the desire of God is the ]" and that ] is impossible without kundalini awakening. As the Kundalini rises through these centres, the qualities of the chakras are said to begin manifesting spontaneously. Most illnesses are said to result of damage to the chakras and Kundalini is said to repair them. | |||
] | |||
Sahaja Yoga believes that in addition to our physical body there is a ] composed of ] (channels) and ] (energy centres). Nirmala Srivastava equates the Sushumna ] with the ], the Ida nadi with the left and the Pingala nadi with the right sides of the sympathetic nervous system. Psychoanalyst Sudhir Kakar writes that Nirmala Srivastava's additions to this widespread traditional ']' model include giving it a scientific, neurological veneer, an elaboration of the health aspects and an introduction of notions of traditional Christian morality.<ref>Sudhir Kakar wrote in his book ''Shamans, Mystics and Doctors'', "Essentially, Nirmala Srivastava's model of the human psyche is {{sic|comprised |hide=y|of}} the traditional tantric and hatha yoga notions of the subtle body, with its 'nerves' and 'centers,' and fuelled by a pervasive 'subtle energy' that courses through both the human and the divine, through the body and the cosmos. Nirmala Srivastava's contributions to this ancient model are not strikingly original: as a former medical student she has sought to give it a scientific, neurological veneer; as a former faith healer, she has elaborated upon those aspects of the model that are concerned with sickness and health; as someone born into an Indian Christian family she has tried to introduce notions of traditional Christian morality into an otherwise amoral Hindu view of the psyche." See Kakar (1991), p. 196</ref> | |||
Sahaja Yoga teaches that when the ] (topmost) chakra is pierced by the Kundalini, a person will feel a cool breeze on top of their head and/or on their hands. These sensations (referred to as 'vibrations') are interpreted in Sahaja Yoga as indicating ] or an "encounter with Reality."<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org.in/SelfRealization.asp</ref> The vibrations sensed are believed to be an objective divine energy that can even be caught on camera.<ref></ref> | |||
Chakras do not physically exist<ref name="Shermer 2002">{{cite book |title=] | publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-57607-653-8 |page= |editor-last=Shermer |editor-first=Michael |editor-link=Michael Shermer |volume=1 |year=2002}}</ref> but in a variety of ancient meditation practices they are believed to be part of the subtle body.<ref name="Sharma2006p193">{{cite book|first=Arvind |last=Sharma |title=A Primal Perspective on the Philosophy of Religion |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PiO8lKUs9-YC |year=2006 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-4020-5014-5 |pages=193–196}}</ref> | |||
If there is a feeling of warmth or heat, it is interpreted as the Kundalini working to achieve this state. Sensations in the hands, head and/or body are also used to diagnose imbalances in the different chakras and nadis. <ref></ref> <ref></ref> | |||
=== Apostasy === | |||
Upon ']', the practitioner may also experience thoughtless awareness (Nirvichar ]).<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org.in/SYIntro.asp a unique living process</ref> | |||
In common with similar movements, most people who have left the Sahaja Yoga movement do not describe their experience as being unremittingly negative, often finding something positive they can say.<ref name="coney1999" />{{rp|184}} Nevertheless, in interviews with ex-members Judith Coney heard various complaints, including that they had experienced unwanted ], had been dismayed by the difference between the reality of the movement and what they had expected, and had found their time in the movement frightening.<ref name="coney1999" />{{rp|182}} | |||
The ex-members who believed they had gained some form of supernatural protection from being in the movement were generally fearful of being exposed to retribution for having left, perhaps in the form of a ] or fatal accident.<ref name="coney1999" />{{rp|180}} | |||
===Healing=== | |||
=== Eschatology === | |||
Overactivity of the ] and ] ] is said to cause mental tension, psychopathological conditions and connection to the world of dead souls while clogged chakras are said to cause mental and physical disease.<ref>Kakar, Sudhir (1984) ''Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and Its Healing Traditions'', ISBN 0-226-42279-8 p204 "In summary, besides the overactivity of the left and right channels, which creates mental tension, gives rise to psychopathological conditions and may connect an individual to the world of dead souls, upset or clogged chakras are held to be a second root cause of mental and physical disease. If the chakras are not linked together by the flow of energy, there is no "integrated" personality, while a "catch" on a chakra prevents its presiding god from sending out his particular "virtue" into the body-mind system."</ref> Sahaja Yoga claims that it has cured patients of "high blood pressure, asthma, epilepsy, diabetes, cancer, etc."<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org.in/Benefits.asp</ref><ref>http://www.apsahaj.org/benefits.html</ref> In an interview, Nirmala Srivastava stated Sahaja Yoga has cured people with AIDS.<ref> "Shri Mataji: And now you see also so many diseases we have cured - cancer, everything. Except for AIDS and this Alzheimer’s. Not that we cannot cure, we have cured. But they’re extremely rude people, specially these Alzheimer’s people are. They abuse you, say all kinds of things. And the other ones think they’re martyrs. AIDS people think they’re martyrs."</ref> She has also said that Sahaja Yoga can cure mental illnesses such as schizophrenia.<ref name="eveningstandard" /> Relapse or failure to be cured in the first place are seen as indicative of a lack of faith in Nirmala Srivastava and her divinity.<ref>Kakar, Sudhir (1984) ''Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and Its Healing Traditions'', ISBN 0-226-42279-8 p206 "The cult members of course consider such temporary cures as showing a lack of faith in Mataji and her divinity. Given their premise that faith in Mataji can permanently cure the most intractable disease, a patient's persisting symptoms "prove" that he lacks faith, which in turn "proves" the correctness of the premise. As Paul Watzlawick and Leon Festinger, among others, have pointed out, once a tentative explanation has taken hold of our minds, information to the contrary may produce not corrections but elaborations of the explanation."</ref> | |||
Within the Sahaja Yoga belief system, because we are in the final phase of the world (]) before the ], the Earth is rich in ]s, who use ]ic forces to ] people, impersonate ]s, and spread evil.<ref name="coney1999" />{{rp|40}} | |||
Judith Coney writes that Nirmala Srivastava claimed to be ], who had returned to earth to save it from "demonic influences."<ref name="coney1999" />{{rp|93}} | |||
===Nirmala Srivastava=== | |||
<!-- this section is about Sahaja Yoga beliefs about Nirmala Srivastava, it is not a biography of Nirmala Srivastava, | |||
and is therefore different from the Nirmala Srivastava article --> | |||
] is said to have made a Unique Discovery of a way to grant Self Realisation en masse after attending a ] meditation camp in ]{{fact|date=January 2008}} on May 5, 1970. Nirmala Srivastava, who claims to reside in the Sahasrara chakra , is said to have opened the primordial Sahasrara and thereby cleared the path for the Kundalini to rise effortlessly in all who desire Self Realization. The ability to grant en masse 'Self Realisation' is held to be proof that Nirmala Srivastava is the '] of our times'. Nirmala Srivastava has claimed to be the complete<ref>http://www.tnsahaj.org/AdiSakthiByThirumoolar.htm</ref> incarnation of the ] or Adi (Primordial) ].<ref>Srivastava, Nirmala (1983, 21 March) Birthday Puja, Sydney, Australia "I am the Holy Ghost. I am the Adi Shakti. I am the One who has come on this Earth for the first time in this Form to do this tremendous task. The more you understand this the better it would be. You will change tremendously. I knew I'll have to say that openly one day and we have said it. But now it is you people who have to prove it that I'm that."</ref> Nirmala Srivastava "is regarded as an authority who cannot be questioned and is venerated as "Shri Mataji" ("Divine Mother") and as the carnation of the Holy Spirit.". | |||
Coney writes that Nirmala Srivastava identified what she saw as increased decadence in society as the work of demons "intent on dragging human beings to hell".<ref name="coney1999" />{{rp|123}} | |||
Sahaja Yoga holds that the incarnation of the Adi (Primordial) ] was prophesied in the ] and the Nadi Grantha.<ref>N B Salkune (2002) The Times of India. Editorial 1 Mar "Shri Markandeya Purana has prophesied the incarnation of the Adi Shakti for the salvation of human beings... Indian Jyotisha Acharya Kaka Bhujandar Tatvacharya noted in his renowned Nadi Grantha, some 2,000 years ago, that a great yogi will appear on the earth and this yogi will have all the powers (shaktis) of the Adi Shakti."</ref> Religious texts have been used to support the claims of other self-professed ], ] and ]. | |||
== |
== Organization == | ||
'''Vishwa Nirmala Dharma''' (trans: Universal Pure Religion, also known as '''Sahaja Yoga International''') is the organizational part of the movement. It is a registered organization in countries such as Colombia,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mininteriorjusticia.gov.co/adminFiles/REGISTRO%20PUBLICO%20ENTIDADES%20RELIGIOSAS%2030-06-2004%20.xls |title=Registro Publico Entidades Religiosas 30-06-2004 |trans-title=Public Registry of Religious Entities |publisher=]: Republic of Colombia |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928010408/http://www.mininteriorjusticia.gov.co/adminFiles/REGISTRO%20PUBLICO%20ENTIDADES%20RELIGIOSAS%2030-06-2004%20.xls |archive-date=28 September 2007}}</ref> the United States of America,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/followup/b5ngo.htm |title=List of ECOSOC/Beijing and New Accredited NGOs that attended the special session of the General Assembly |publisher=United Nations |access-date=26 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160912163921/http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/followup/b5ngo.htm |archive-date=12 September 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref> and Austria.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/2006/71367.htm |title=Austria – 2006 Report on International Religious Freedom |publisher=]: ] | access-date=25 June 2017 }}</ref> It is registered as a religion in Spain.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_526_2006.asp |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120910213600/http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_526_2006.asp |archive-date=10 September 2012 |title=Religion in Spain |website=sahajayoga.org |publisher=Vishwa Nirmala Dharma |department=Sahaja Worldwide News and Announcements (SWAN) |date=19 July 2006 |access-date=26 November 2011}}</ref> <!--source shows the legal documents --> | |||
=== Membership statistics === | |||
According to followers, the practice of Sahaja Yoga results in spontaneous ]<ref>http://www.austinsahajayoga.org/testimonials.htm</ref> which, according to the official Sahaja Yoga website, can even be obtained online as one sits in front of one's computer,<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/experienceitnow/default.asp</ref> although it is usually experienced at a Sahaja Yoga program. | |||
There are no available statistical data about Sahaja Yoga membership. In 2001, the number of core members worldwide was estimated to be 10,000, in addition to 100,000 practitioners more or less in the periphery.<ref name="inform" /> There are varying reports about the movement's distribution worldwide. According to the Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi Sahaja Yoga World Foundation, Sahaja Yoga centers are established in over 140 countries.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://shrimataji.org/site/life/biography-from-nirmala-srivastava-to-shri-mataji.html |title=From Nimala Srivastava to Shri Mataji |last=Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi Sahaja Yoga World Foundation |date=7 May 2017 |website=Shri Mataji: A Life Dedicated to Humanity |access-date=4 May 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170528013626/http://shrimataji.org/site/life/biography-from-nirmala-srivastava-to-shri-mataji.html |archive-date=28 May 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> In a news article in Indian Express published on the occasion of Srivastava's death in 2011, however, Sahaja Yoga centers were said to exist in 140 countries.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
=== International Sahaja Public School=== | |||
Apart from those practices listed below, there are other practices such as ],<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.ca/Meditation/role_of_prayer.htm</ref><ref> Australian Sahaja Yoga website</ref> ]<ref>http://sahajayoga.la/materials/Turya-course%20Ceremonies.pdf</ref> raising one's ] using one's hands and attention<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.ca/Meditation/raising_kundalini.htm</ref> and putting on 'bandhan'.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.ca/Meditation/bandhan.htm</ref> | |||
{{main|International Sahaja Public School}} | |||
The International Sahaja Public School in ] founded in 1990, teaches around 250 international students annually {{asof|1999|lc=yes}}, and has accepted children from the age of 6.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|159}} | |||
=== Yuvashakti === | |||
The methods for practicing Sahaja Yoga are made available free of charge to those interested. According to the official Sahaja Yoga website there is a fee for attending international ]s to cover costs and voluntary ]<ref></ref>. In the ], the dakshina has only been collected separately from the costs since 2005, when the customary ] was $121 per adult.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_358_2005.asp</ref> | |||
Sahaja Yoga's youth movement is called "Yuvashakti" (also "Nirmal Shakti Yuva Sangha"), from the Sanskrit words Yuva (Youth) and ] (Power). | |||
The movement is active in forums such as the World Youth Conference<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.youthlink.org/globalguide.pdf |title=Guide to the Global Youth Movement |website=youthlink.org |editor-first=Jonah |editor-last=Wittkamper |year=2002 |publisher=Global Youth Action Network |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051222200027/http://www.youthlink.org/globalguide.pdf |archive-date=22 December 2005}}</ref> and ] which aim at discussing global issues, and ways of solving them. | |||
===Meditation=== | |||
Sahaja Yoga meditation was developed during the 1970s<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.at/shrimataji/page4/page12/page12.html</ref> by ], and is followed and promoted among and by the Sahaja Yoga movement. It aims to enter a state of "thoughtless awareness" - where the practitioner 'purifies' his/her attention, achieving clarity of mind.<ref>http://www.scotlandyoga.com/meditation/thoughtless.html</ref> | |||
The Yuvashakti participated in the 2000 "Civil Society & Governance Project"<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ids.ac.uk/ids/civsoc/final/india/ind7.doc |title=Case Study Civil Society & Governance Project |date=February 2000 |first=Vinita |last=Tatke |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040103160620/http://www.ids.ac.uk/ids/civsoc/final/india/ind7.doc |archive-date=3 January 2004 |access-date=6 November 2006}}</ref> in which they were "instrumental in reaching out to women from the poor communities and providing them with work". | |||
It is suggested a candle or oil lamp is lit in front of a photograph of Shri Mataji, which is believed to emit a constant stream of "positive, cool vibrations (energy)".<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.la/Discovery-course%20AboutSY.pdf</ref> The practitioner sits comfortably, breathes normally and holds the hands out, palm upwards, as if receiving something precious.<ref>http://www.tnsahaj.org/Meditation.htm</ref>During meditation, the attention is focussed on the ] chakra.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.la/Discovery-course%20AboutSY.pdf</ref> Sahaja Yoga meditation can be practiced while listening to music or in silence.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.ca/Meditation/music.htm</ref> | |||
=== Vishwa Nirmal Prem Ashram === | |||
] has stated that meditation is not thinking "about your problems at all, whatever chakras you have, anything", rather it "means exposing yourself to God’s grace."<ref name="whatIsSYmed"></ref> She has described meditation as "an individual journey towards God."<ref name="whatIsSYmed" /> | |||
The ''Vishwa Nirmala Prem Ashram'' is a not-for profit project by the NGO '''Vishwa Nirmala Dharma''' (Sahaja Yoga International) located in Noida, ], ], opened in 2003. The ashram is a "facility where women and girls are rehabilitated by being taught meditation and other skills that help them overcome trauma".<ref>{{cite news |url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/opinion/edit-page/A-New-Childhood/articleshow/457754.cms |title=A New Childhood |first=Arshiya |last=Khanna |newspaper=] | date=16 November 2006 |access-date=4 November 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018233831/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2006-11-16/edit-page/27827906_1_girls-drunken-man-mother |archive-date=18 October 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |magazine=Blossom Times |volume=1 |issue=3 |date=31 August 2007 |url=http://www.blossomtimes.org/site/pdf/BlossomTimes_issue3.pdf |title=An interview with Gisela Matzer |page=3 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926011530/http://www.blossomtimes.org/site/pdf/BlossomTimes_issue3.pdf |archive-date=26 September 2007}}</ref> | |||
=== Funding === | |||
The practice has been taught to prisoners in Italy and the United States, such as at ] to "help the prisoners' social, psychological and spiritual recovery"<ref> - Queen's tribune online</ref><ref name="prisonitalia"></ref> Nirmala Srivastava has said that the younger children practice meditation the better.<ref>http://www.tnsahaj.org/Meditation.htm</ref> | |||
According to the dictates of their founder, the methods for practicing Sahaja Yoga are made available free of charge to those interested. Nevertheless, according to the official Sahaja Yoga website there is a fee for attending international ] to cover costs.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_358_2005.asp |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120915070213/http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_358_2005.asp |archive-date=15 September 2012 |title=Puja/Dakshina Costs |website=sahajayoga.org |publisher=Vishwa Nirmala Dharma |department=Sahaja Worldwide Announcements and News (SWAN) |date=20 July 2005 |access-date=26 November 2011}}</ref> | |||
According to author ], "Shri Mataji neither charged for her lectures nor for her ability to give Self Realization, nor does one have to become a member of this organization. She insisted that one cannot pay for enlightenment and she continued to denounce the ]-proclaimed 'gurus' who are more interested in the seekers' purse than their spiritual ascent".<ref name="barrett">{{cite book |last=Barrett |first=David V. |author-link=David V. Barrett |title=The New Believers |publisher=Cassell |year=2001 |isbn=0-304-35592-5 |pages= |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/newbelieverssurv00barr/page/297 }}</ref> | |||
====Medical studies==== | |||
<!--this isn't a refutation to the previous line | |||
Sahaja Yoga leaders have denied this, pointing out that their group is recognised in both the US and Russia, that all members are free to come and go as they please. They admit that members are asked for voluntary contributions to events and projects, but that the money does not go to the founder herself. A current member of 25 years said: "All the organisation owns is a few properties in various countries. If we were into making money, that would be a pretty feeble return."<ref name=eveningstandard /> --> | |||
== Cult classification == | |||
Some studies have suggested that ] may have some effect in addressing some medical ailments. One study reports results with ] patients. <ref name="asthma">Manocha R, Marks G.B., Kenchington P., Peters D., Salome C.M. "Sahaja yoga in the management of moderate to severe asthma: a randomized controlled trial",'' Thorax'' 2003;57:110-115. URL: </ref><ref>Manocha, R. "Sahaja yoga in asthma", Thorax 2003;58:825-826. URL: "The authors sincerely regret any misunderstanding ... They sincerely and gratefully acknowledge the important and crucial role played by HH Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi and the Sahaja yoga practitioners of Australia in the execution of this study, and sincerely regret not having made more appropriate acknowledgements in the original article."</ref> Short-term effects on asthma have also been noticed, by both objective and subjective measures.<ref name="asthma"/> According to an article in the ''Medical Observer Weekly'', Sahaja yoga meditation was found to be "significantly more effective than a generic form of meditation in reducing stress, anxiety and depressive symptoms"<ref name ="Medical Observer">, August 13, 2004, ''Medical Observer Weekly''</ref>. | |||
Cult expert ] has written that Sahaja Yoga exhibits the classic characteristics of a cult in the way it conditions its members.<ref name="jma">{{cite book |author=Abgrall, Jean-Marie |title=Soul Snatchers: The Mechanics of Cults |publisher=Algora Publishing |year=2000 |author-link=Jean-Marie Abgrall |pages=139–144}}</ref> These include having a god-like leader, disrupting existing relationships, and promising security and specific benefits while demanding loyalty and financial support.<ref name="jma" /> Abgrall writes that the true activities of the cult are hidden behind the projection of a positive image and an explicit statement that "Sahaja yoga is not a cult".<ref name="jma" /> | |||
Judith Coney has written that members "disguised some of their beliefs" from non-members.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|214}} Coney writes people who had left the movement welcomed the chance to talk to her as an independent researcher, but that some were fearful of reprisals if they did so, and others found their experiences too painful to revisit.<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|214}} Most were unwilling to talk to her "on the record".<ref name=coney1999/>{{rp|214}} | |||
A pilot study (N = 14, no control group) on the effect of Sahaja Yoga meditation conducted by Dr Ramesh Manocha of the Royal Hospital for Women in Sydney, Dr. Barbara Semmar of the department of Psychology at and Dr. Deborah Black of the Faculty of Medicine at the School of Community Medicine of the ] on ] showed that "Changes in vasomotor symptoms, especially hot flashes, were most prominent as a significant decrease of 67% at post-treatment and 57% at follow-up" <ref> Clinical Psychology in Medical settings viewed 15 November 2007.</ref> The ] of a news report on a preliminary study suggested that Sahaja Yoga meditation "may be the most effective form of treatment | |||
for occupational stress". <ref>"The preliminary study by the Royal Hospital for Women's (RHW) Natural Therapies unit | |||
trialled the sahaja yoga technique of meditation based on "thoughtless awareness"." ''NSW: Meditation found to relieve occupational stress'' AAP News Australia June 15 2001 "A meditation technique may be the most effective form of treatment for occupational stress, a new study to be unveiled in Sydney tomorrow has shown. The preliminary study by the Royal Hospital for Women's (RHW) Natural Therapies unit trialled the sahaja yoga technique of meditation based on "thoughtless awareness". </ref> | |||
An "A-Z of cults" in '']'' reported that adherents of Sahaja Yoga found a cult designation "particularly offensive" but that the movement had been plagued by accounts of children being separated from their parents and of large financial donations made to Nirmala Srivastava.<ref name=az>{{cite news |newspaper=The Guardian |title=A-Z of cults |first=Robert |last=Cornelius |date=14 May 1995}}</ref> | |||
It should be noted that the (senior) researcher of all the above studies is a Sahaja Yogi and attends to ]'s personal medical needs. | |||
In 2001, '']'' reported the allegation made by some ex-members, that Sahaja Yoga is a cult which aims to control the minds of its members.<ref name=indy-cult/> Ex-members said that the organisation insists all family ties are broken and all communication with them cease, that crying children can be seen as being possessed by demons, that negative and positive vibrations need "clearing", and that being a member of the group is very expensive.<ref name=indy-cult>{{Cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/shri-who-must-be-obeyed-9263416.html |title=Shri who must be obeyed |date=13 July 2001 |work=The Independent |access-date=17 November 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180119200021/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/shri-who-must-be-obeyed-9263416.html |archive-date=19 January 2018 |url-status=live}}</ref> In 2005, '']'' reported that some critics who feel that the group is a cult have started their own websites.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkzJmZnYmVsN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk2NzMxNTk4 |title=Hundreds fill weekend with devotion, bliss |newspaper=] | first=John |last=Chadwick |date=24 July 2005 |location=Bergen County, New Jersey |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070320154926/http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkzJmZnYmVsN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk2NzMxNTk4 |archive-date=20 March 2007}}</ref> | |||
A case study showed that test subjects who were practising Sahaja Yoga meditation had "significant improvement in VCS (Visual Contrast Sensitivity)", and that meditation appeared to bring about changes in some of the electrophysiological responses studied in ] patients.<ref>Panjwani U., Selvamurthy W., Singh S.H., Gupta H.L., Mukhopadhyay S., Thakur L. "Effect of Sahaja yoga meditation on auditory evoked potentials (AEP) and visual contrast sensitivity (VCS) in epileptics", ''Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback'' 2000;25(1):1-12 <blockquote>"Sahaja Yoga meditation appears to bring about changes in some of the electrophysiological responses studied in epileptic patients"</blockquote> | |||
</ref> Another study indicated that Sahaja Yoga meditation results in fewer and less acute epileptic seizures <ref name="pajwani">Panjwani U, Selvamurthy W, Singh SH, Gupta HL, Thakur L, Rai UC. "Effect of sahaja yoga practice on seizure control & EEG changes in patients of epilepsy." ''Indian J Med Res'' 1996;103: 165-72.</ref>{{citequote|date=November 2007}} It should be noted that one of the authors of the latter study was a Sahaja Yogi and was appointed by ] as the first director of the International SahajaYoga Research and Health Center. A review of the studies determined that there was insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about the efficacy of Sahaja Yoga meditation in treating epilepsy.<ref></ref> and that further studies were needed. | |||
In 2005 the Belgian State organisation IACSSO (]) issued an advisory against Sahaja Yoga.<ref name=final-judgement/> The advisory categorizes Sahaja Yoga as a ] cult ("syncretische cultus") based on the Hindu tradition, and warns that the recruitment techniques used by Sahaja Yoga pose a risk to the public in general and young people in particular.<ref name=be-advisory>{{cite web |title=Advies van het Informatie- en Adviescentrum inzake de Schadelijke Sektarische Organisaties (IACSSO) over Sahaja Yoga |publisher=IACSSO |language=nl |date=7 March 2005 |url=https://www.iacsso.be/publicatiesadvies050307.htm}}</ref> Sahaja Yoga Belgium sued IACSSO and preliminary rulings were found in their favour, adjudging that Sahaja Yoga was "not a cult".<ref>{{cite news |title=Sahaja Yoga is geen sekte |url=http://www.demorgen.be/dm/nl/989/Binnenland/article/detail/255219/2008/04/25/Sahaja-Yoga-is-geen-sekte.dhtml |newspaper=] | date=22 July 2008 |trans-title=Sahaja Yoga is not a cult |language=nl |access-date=26 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120121220002/http://www.demorgen.be/dm/nl/989/Binnenland/article/detail/255219/2008/04/25/Sahaja-Yoga-is-geen-sekte.dhtml |archive-date=21 January 2012 |url-status=live}}</ref> However, on appeal in 2011 these preliminary rulings were overturned and in a final judgement it was found that Sahaja Yoga had been unable to refute IACSSO's statements.<ref name=final-judgement>{{cite book |page=24 |title=State and Church in the European Union |edition=3rd |veditors=Robbers G |vauthors=Torfs R, Vrielink J |year=2019 |publisher=Nomos Verlag |chapter=State and Church in Belgium |isbn=978-3-84-529626-5 |doi=10.5771/9783845296265-11}}</ref> | |||
Mishra reported that Sahaja Yoga meditation resulted in a "significant increase" in beta-endorphins between control and meditating subjects. <ref>Ram Mishra, (a.k.a., Prof. Ram K. Mishra), Cia Barlas, A. Pradhan), "Effect of meditation on plasma beta-endorphins in humans", 1993, (publication details unknown). Mishra's study abstract was web-posted at U. of Arizona Center for Consciousness Studies, Department of Psychology, abstracts page, for speakers on Friday, April 7, (2006?) (server page last modified 2006-03-29). Quote: ''"The present study was undertaken to evaluate the effectiveness of the meditative practice of Sahaja yoga on plasma β-endorphin levels. .... There was a significant increase (p<0.01) between control and meditating subjects when controlled for age and gender. Female subjects, however, displayed less increase in the β-endorphins as compared to male subjects. ...."'' </ref> SY's commentary on a study by Mishra , et al., 1993, suggests that an observed increase in beta-endorphins for meditating males could explain "so-called miraculous cures"<ref></ref>. | |||
In 2013, '']'' reported that the Belgian Department of State Security monitors how often politicians are contacted and lobbied by organizations. The list of organizations includes Sahaja Yoga.<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=] | title=Staatsveiligheid houdt Wetstraat in de gaten |trans-title=State keeps an eye Wetstraat |first1=Buxant |last1=Martin |first2=Steven |last2=Samyn |date=2 February 2013 |url=http://www.demorgen.be/dm/nl/989/Binnenland/article/detail/1572744/2013/02/02/Staatsveiligheid-houdt-Wetstraat-in-de-gaten.dhtml |language=nl |access-date=2 February 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130514122122/http://www.demorgen.be/dm/nl/989/Binnenland/article/detail/1572744/2013/02/02/Staatsveiligheid-houdt-Wetstraat-in-de-gaten.dhtml |archive-date=14 May 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
===Puja=== | |||
In 2001, The '']'' reported that Sahaja Yoga has been "described as a dangerous cult" and "has a dissident website created by former members". The reporter, ], wrote about an event he attended and noted that a Sahaja Yoga representative asked him to feel free to talk to whomever he wanted. He remarked, "Either their openness is a PR ], or they genuinely have nothing to hide." He proposed that "one of the key definitions of a cult is the rigour with which it strives to recruit new members" and concluded that there was no aggressive recruitment squeeze.<ref name="eveningstandard">{{cite news |title=Monday night with the divine mother |newspaper=] | date=18 July 2001 |first=John |last=Crace}}</ref> | |||
] is a traditional Hindu ceremony. In Sahaja Yoga, Sahaja Yogis express their ] to particular deities.<ref></ref>. In some pujas, followers worship Srivastava as the ]<ref></ref>. This may include ], honey, yoghurt, milk, sugar and water being poured on Nirmala Srivastava's feet and then drunk.<ref name="inform" /> Nirmala Srivastava has said that Puja is necessary to achieve a state of "]" <ref>{{cite speech | |||
| title = Mahashivaratri puja | |||
| author = Srivastava, Nirmala | |||
| first = Nirmala | |||
| last = Srivastava | |||
| authorlink = | |||
|date=29/02/1984 | |||
| location = ], ] | |||
}}</ref> | |||
] wrote that some former members say that they were expelled from the movement because they "resisted influence that Mataji had over their lives". According to Barrett, the movement's founder's degree of control over members' lives has given rise to concerns.<ref name="barrett" /> The Austrian Ministry for Environment, Youth and Family states that "Sahaja Yoga" regards Nirmala Srivastava as an authority who cannot be questioned.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sekten! Wissen schützt |url=http://www.lermanet.com/cisar/germany/books/990913b.htm |trans-title=Sects! Knowledge Protects |author=Ministry for Environment, Youth and Family: ] | others=Translated by cisar.org |website=lermanet.com |access-date=17 April 2014 |year=1999 |location=Vienna |publisher=Druckerei Berger |edition=2nd |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080621020349/http://www.lermanet.com/cisar/germany/books/990913b.htm |archive-date=21 June 2008 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
{{Cquotetxt|Puja is one of the things by which you can excite the forms into formless. Now your centers are the centers of energies, but they too have a guiding deity sitting on all these chakras. They are also the formless made into forms. And when you do the puja, the forms melt into formless energies. And these formless energies start flowing, and then blows the wind. And that is how these misidentifications, these superimpositions on the Spirit are removed.|Nirmala Srivastava|<ref>''{{cite speech | |||
| title = Importance of Puja and Havana | |||
| author = Srivastava, Nirmala | |||
| first = Nirmala | |||
| last = Srivastava | |||
| authorlink = | |||
|date=18/06/1983 | |||
| location = ], ] | |||
}}</ref>}} | |||
== References == | |||
According to a Canadian Sahaja Yoga website, puja is defined as: | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
"the act of showing reverence to a God, or another aspect of the Divine through invocations, prayers and songs" and notes that a Sahaja Yoga puja involves "the same kind of ceremony as practised thousands of years ago in the East when mankind had a much closer relationship with God"<ref>"The authentic format of the ceremony has changed very little over the years, except that in the case of Sahaja Yoga the whole focus of the program is to move closer to the Divine and experience a Spiritual communication which goes much further than simply singing a few songs. The vibrational impact of a Puja can be simply astonishing".</ref> | |||
Pujas are recommended for realized souls (people who have received their ] - knowledge of Self) for them to gain from these pujas <ref>{{cite speech | |||
| title = Puja in Brisbane | |||
| author = Srivastava, Nirmala | |||
| first = Nirmala | |||
| last = Srivastava | |||
| authorlink = | |||
|date=06/04/1991 | |||
| location = ], ] | |||
}}<blockquote>"All the gain that you have from Puja is only possible when you are a realised soul otherwise it is useless to do any Puja, any worship, people go to church, sing few hymns and come back, they are just the same and afterwards go to the pub because they think pub is the only place where they can get some joy."</blockquote></ref> | |||
===Cleansing techniques=== | |||
Some cleansing techniques involve the natural ] in the form of candle flame, camphor flame, the earth and salt water. Others techniques involve ice, lemons, chillies , coconuts, ], affirmations, mantras and "shoe-beating"<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
Nirmala Srivastava has developed a ] diet to promote better health. ], ], ], ], ]s and ]s promote the "cooling" of the liver. ], fried foods, ], ], ] and ] are among the foods that are "heating" and thus may be harmful if taken in excess. <ref></ref> | |||
Water can be spiritually vibrated, according to Sahaja Yoga, changing the characteristics of the water, and resulting in purification.<ref></ref> | |||
===Marriages=== | |||
During Nirmala Srivastava's active years, Sahaja Yogis would generally consult her before marrying.<ref name="inform" /> Sahaja Yoga hosts a voluntary arranged marriage system. Those interested and their leaders have to fill out a form concerning the candidate's qualities and involvement in Sahaja Yoga.<ref> Viewed 25 November 2007</ref> detailing their backgrounds and involvement in Sahaja Yoga. The official Sahaja Yoga website still states that the matching is performed by Nirmala Srivastava<ref></ref>, although the matching may be done by a Sahaja Yogi eg a leader.<ref name="inform" /> The official site also states that Sahaja Yogis believe in the sanctity of marriage and have mostly been married by this means.<ref></ref> 'Mass marriage ceremonies'<ref> Viewed 13 December 2007</ref> are sometimes held at puja events.<ref> Viewed 13 December 2007</ref> Judith Coney has written that partnerships have been broken up by Nirmala Srivastava on the basis of being destructive, and that while breakdown of relationships arranged by Nirmala Srivastava is officially unknown, unofficially it is known to occur.<ref>Judith Coney, ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'' (1999) p166</ref>{{citequote}} | |||
===Divorces=== | |||
It is said that Sahaja Yogis are encouraged to separate from partners who are not Sahaja Yogis.<ref name="inform" />. In few cases, it is also said that the leader has personally asked member's of the group to get divorced from their partner's for no apparent reason,<ref>http://www.freedomofmind.com/resourcecenter/groups/s/sahaja/test3.htm Testimonial-1 </ref> or reason cited, may not have been a valid ground for divorce legally. It is also alleged that the leader has forcefully separated children's from their parents, which according to some media report creates psychological problems amongst those children's. <ref>http://prevensectes.com/sahaja3.htm Nirmala Yoga No. 4 1984 Children can be very young sent abroad without their parents, regardless of the possible psychological effects of such a separation. Over the past year, several children under the age of 4 have been conducted abroad and left in ashrams for several months without their parents, children or adolescents of school age were sent to school movement in India.</ref> | |||
==Organization== | |||
'''Vishwa Nirmala Dharma''' (trans: Universal Pure Religion, also known as '''Sahaja Yoga International''') is the organizational part of the movement. It is a registered ] in many countries such as Columbia<ref></ref>, the United States of America<ref></ref>, France<ref></ref>, and Austria<ref></ref>. It is registered as a religion in ].<ref></ref> | |||
The organization is governed by the World Council for the Advancement of Sahaja Yoga and, in addition to directly promoting Sahaja Yoga, promotes Sahaja culture, runs schools, a health center, a youth movement, and a project for the rehabilitation of "destitute women and orphaned children".<ref> </ref> | |||
{{clear}} | |||
===World Council for the Advancement of Sahaja Yoga=== | |||
The World Council for the Advancement of Sahaja Yoga (WCASY, also known as the "Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi Sahaja Yoga World Foundation") is the highest authority in Sahaja Yoga.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_512_2006.asp Historic video affirming the role of World Council for the Advancement of Sahaja Yoga</ref> It was proposed December 2003 and formed the following year. <ref></ref><ref>] ] ] speaking on behalf of his wife, Nirmala Srivastava. <ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_512_2006.asp Historic video affirming the role of The World Council Of Sahaja Yoga</ref> | |||
The WCASY has 31 members, "World Leaders" who represent Sahaja Yoga collectives from across the world. Among the latest additions to the WCASY is a Dr. Bohdan Shehovych, Gagan Ahluwalia, Paul Ellis, Alan Wherry, and Alan Pereira in 2005<ref>http://sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_260_2004.asp</ref> According to an official Sahaja Yoga website, Guido Lanza, a World Leader, was suspended from all activities in Sahaja Yoga in 2005, for disrupting a ] ritual and threatening members. An Italian ] was "temporarily closed"<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.com/swan/view_swan.asp?mode=print&swanid=503</ref> The same website announced that a Russian World Leader<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_332_2005.asp</ref>, Sergey Perezhogin, resigned his position in 2005.<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/swan/view/swan_373_2005.asp</ref> | |||
===Schools=== | |||
*The ] in ] was founded in 1990, teaches around 250 international students annually and has accepted children from the age of 4.<ref>Coney, Judith (1999) ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'', (London: Curzon Press) ISBN 0-7007-1061-2 p159</ref> | |||
*The Shri P.K.Salve Kala Pratishthan is an ] and ] academy that was founded in ], India, in 2003.<ref>http://www.pksacademy.com/about.htm</ref> | |||
*The Cabella Primary School in Italy will open in September 2008, with the children attending the local village school in ].<ref></ref> | |||
*An international kindergarten was opened in ], Czech Republic.<ref> via web archive.</ref> | |||
*A small kindergarten and primary boarding school was opened in ] in 2004<ref></ref>. As of 2006 it had an enrollment of fourteen students from pre-kindergarten through grade 3.<ref></ref> | |||
*There has been a Sahaja Yoga school in Rome that, according to Judith Coney, has accepted boarding infants from the age of 2<ref>Coney, Judith (1999) ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'', (London: Curzon Press) ISBN 0-7007-1061-2 p159</ref>. | |||
===Health center=== | |||
The organization runs the in ], ], which uses Sahaja Yoga methods. Daily activities at the center include meditation, clearing techniques, listening to Nirmala Srivastava's lectures and ] singing. This health center claims to have been successful in curing incurable diseases such as (refractory) high blood pressure, epilepsy, and multiple sclerosis.<ref name="Medical Observer">, August 13, 2004, ''Medical Observer Weekly''</ref><ref></ref> The center's website states: "What really counts in this Health Centre is that Our Holy Mother Shri Mataji has Her Divine Attention here and it is evident that She effects all cures." | |||
On 9 May 2007 a conference called Towards Sustainable Global Health was held. The conference was organised by the United Nations, UNESCO-UNEVOC and the University of Bonn. Sahaja Yoga was presented at a conference symposium by doctors from the Sahaja Yoga Research and Health Centre, Mumbai, India, Prof Katya Rubia, King’s College, London and others.<ref></ref> | |||
===Yuvashakti=== | |||
]'s youth movement is called "Yuvashakti" (also "Nirmal Shakti Yuva Sangha"), from the Sanskrit words Yuva (Youth) and ] (Power). | |||
As well as helping organize Sahaja Yoga events such as Realize America tour,<ref>http://realizeamerica.com</ref> The European realization tour,<ref>http://europeanrealisationtour.org</ref> and Realize Australia,<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.com.au/realise_australia</ref> Yuvashakti is active in forums such as the World Youth Conference<ref>http://www.youthlink.org/globalguide.pdf</ref>and ] which aim at discussing global issues, and ways of solving them. | |||
An example of this is the participation in the 2000 "Civil Society & Governance Project"<!--DeadLink(3Jan2008) <ref> Viewed 6 November 2006</ref> --> in which Yuvashakti were "instrumental in reaching out to women from the poor communities and providing them with work".{{Fact|date=January 2008}} | |||
===Sahaja Yoga culture=== | |||
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: ] group]] --> | |||
Because of the diversity of cultures practicing Sahaja Yoga, a range of different projects focusing on the similarities and differences between cultures was born, including the formation of theater company called (TEV) and musical groups playing ] of different genres, such as , Sahaj Unlimited and Indialucia including ], ] and ].<ref>http://www.sahajayoga.org/Music</ref><ref>http://turiyasangeet.googlepages.com</ref> As state : music is Divine Inspiration to become the spirit<ref>http://www.pksacademy.com</ref> | |||
===Vishwa Nirmal Prem ashram=== | |||
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: ] --> | |||
The ''Vishwa Nirmala Prem Ashram'' is a not-for profit project by the ] '''Vishwa Nirmala Dharma''' (Sahaja Yoga International) located in Noida, ], ], opened in 2003. The ashram is a "facility where women and girls are rehabilitated by being taught meditation and other skills that help them overcome trauma"<ref> Arshiya Khanna ] 16 Nov 2006, viewed 4 November 2007</ref> In 2005, 21 girls were housed, most of them full orphans, aged between 5 and 12 years, and a "reasonable number of destitute women" .<ref>[http://www.blossomtimes.org/site/pdf/BlossomTimes_issue3.pdf ''Interview with the Ashram Executive Director''</ref> | |||
===Other projects=== | |||
The World Council supports the creation of an 108-room Ashram complex in ], near the birthplace of its founder.<ref></ref> Another project is the transfer of her audio and video tapes, many in delicate condition, to digital media. <ref></ref><ref></ref> The founder is said to have given several of her homes to the trust run by the World Council <ref></ref> to be used in future projects by the organization. The aims to publish 10 or 11 books by Nirmala Srivastava. Sahaja Yoga also broadcasts radio programs<ref></ref><ref>http://www.2ser.com/programs/shows/sahajayoga/?searchterm=sahaja</ref> | |||
==Criticisms== | |||
A leaflet produced by says that, although the initial emphasis is on free involvement, Sahaja Yoga's emphasis on complete devotion to Nirmala Srivastava has led to a number of problems and controversies.<ref name="inform" /> Sahaja Yogis are expected to accept Nirmala Srivastava's view that the more you give, in time and money, the better you will feel. This can lead to Sahaja Yogis cutting themselves off from relatives and former friends and accepting only Nirmala Srivastava's advice about child rearing, whom to marry or when to divorce. Some of those who deviate may be told they are possessed by evil spirits or may be said to be mentally | |||
abnormal and risk being expelled from Sahaja Yoga. This may bring problems for those who still believe in the | |||
power of Nirmala Srivastava and fear 'losing vibrations' and the possibility of a form of demonic possession.<ref name="inform" /> INFORM is an independent charity, based at the ], that was founded in 1988 by Professor ] with the help of British ] funding and the support of the mainstream Churches.<ref></ref> | |||
As of 2001, according to the author ], the movement had been criticized because of encouragement of its members to make donations to pay for Mataji's trips and "expensive properties."<ref name=barrett>Barrett, David V. ''The New Believers'' (Cassell 2001) ISBN 0-304-35592-5 pages 297-298 “Sahaja Yoga, like many other new religious movements, is involved in charitable social work, including a hospital and a cancer research centre – both using Sahaja Yoga methods for healing – a classical musical school, and a shelter for the poor in Delhi. Sahaja Yoga makes a big point of its teaching being free: | |||
- Amazingly, without any financial support from any person, Shri Mataji neither charges for Her lectures nor for Her ability to give Self Realization, nor does one have to become a member of this organization. She insists that you cannot pay for enlightenment and to-date she continues to denounce the false self-proclaimed ‘gurus’ who are more interested in the seekers’ purse than their spiritual ascent. | |||
- But in fact this is one of the major criticisms of the movement, that the often middle-class members are encouraged to make regular donations to pay for Shri Mataji’s trips around the world, and to buy her expensive properties, such as Shudy Camps Park House near Cambridge, England, in 1986 and an Italian castle in 1991. (...) Devoted member refer to her as the Divine Mother, and she has called herself Adi Shakh, Primal Mother of All; many take her advice on child-rearing, and some ask her to choose their marriage partners. This amount of influence over her followers’ lives has caused concern in several countries. Some former have said that they were expelled from the movement because they resisted Shri Maraji’s influence over their lives.” </ref> Barrett further wrote that some former members say that they were expelled from the movement because they "resisted influence that Mataji had over their lives."<ref name=barrett/>According to Barrett, Mataji's degree of control over members' lives has given raise to concerns. <ref name=barrett/> | |||
Also in 2001, ]'s ''AAP'' reported that a ] named Dr Bohdan Shehovych had been fined after grabbing a Sahaja Yoga critic "round the head and dragged him over a backyard fence"<ref name="doctorfined">"Qld: Doctor fined over yoga dispute", ''AAP General News'', ], ], ].<br>Brisbane's District Court has been told a GP grabbed a man round the head and dragged him over a backyard fence -- accusing him of befouling members of an Indian cult. The court was told Dr BOHDAN MYRON SHEHOVYCH was among a group delivering a letter to the man from the founder of the meditation religion, Sahaja Yoga. The 52-year-old doctor from the New South Wales central coast today pleaded guilty to entering a house at Mount Ommaney in Brisbane' west and assaulting TERENCE RICHARD BLACKLEY on March 3 this year. The court heard the group was delivering a letter to BLACKLEY from spiritual leader SHRI MATAJI NIRMALA DEVI, alleging spiritual and criminal wrongdoings. Judge KERRY O'BRIEN today told the doctor that someone of his intelligence should have known better than to behave in that manner. He's fined Dr SHEHOVYCH $1,500 but did not record a conviction.</ref> The physician had been part of a group delivering a letter to the critic from Nirmala Srivastava<ref name="doctorfined" />. In 2004 an Australian medical practitioner called Dr Bohdan Shehovych was made a World Leader in Sahaja Yoga and appointed to the World Council for the Advancement of Sahaja Yoga. | |||
There has been a Sahaja Yoga school in Rome<ref></ref> that, according to Judith Coney, has accepted boarding infants from the age of 2<ref name="coney159">Coney, Judith (1999) ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'', (London: Curzon Press) ISBN 0-7007-1061-2 p159</ref>. A 1988 Italian television program surreptitiously filmed children sleeping 6 to a bed and there has been negative press coverage in ''],'' 16/5/91; ''],'' 30/1/91 and '']'', February 1992<ref>Coney, Judith (1999) ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'', (London: Curzon Press) ISBN 0-7007-1061-2 p243</ref>. Coney also reported the allegation that "when Swiss parents protested to ] about their children going away from the age of three, thinking that the command to send their offspring came from the national leader rather than her, she personally reinforced his orders and, moreover, ordered them to have no contact with their children for at least a year."<ref name="coney159" /> | |||
John Crace writing for ''The Evening Standard'' in 2001 reported that the allegations against the Sahaja Yoga organisation are typical of those levelled against alleged cults. Crace wrote that ex-members say that Sahaja Yoga has extensive assets and makes large profits. A member of 25 years said: "All the organisation owns is a few properties in various countries. If we were into making money, that would be a pretty feeble return."<ref name="eveningstandard">, ''The Evening Standard'', ], ], ], John Crace</ref> | |||
==="Cult" allegations=== | |||
A French National assembly report has referred to Sahaja Yoga as a 'cult'<ref></ref> and some newspaper articles have reported on "]" allegations directed at the movement. In ], '']'' reported that certain ex-members say "that Sahaja Yoga is a cult which aims to control the minds of its members"<ref>, ''The Independent'', ], Mary Braid, Beatrice Newbery, ], ]</ref>. In ], ''The Record'' reported that some critics who feel that the group is a cult "have started Internet sites to detail their accusations."<ref>, ''The Record'', John Chadwick, ], ], ]. (Local Section)<br>The movement has its share of critics, some of whom describe it as a cult and have started Internet sites to detail their accusations. One site portrayed Mataji as a manipulative leader who exercised a high degree of control over members' lives, including arranging and breaking up marriages. "I have witnessed Mataji order loving couples to divorce," one former member wrote on a Web site.</ref> | |||
''The Evening Standard'' reported that Sahaja Yoga has been "described as a dangerous cult" and "has a dissident website created by former members listing alleged abuses and about which the respected ] says it has been handling enquiries for 20 years from parents who claim their children have become lost to them." The writer said of the Sahaja Yoga devotees at the event attended asked him to feel free to talk to whomever he wanted. He remarked, "Either their openness is a PR charm offensive, or they genuinely have nothing to hide". He proposed that "one of the key definitions of a cult is the rigour with which it strives to recruit new members" and remarked that he'd "had more trouble getting rid of a double-glazing salesman.".<ref name="eveningstandard" /> | |||
In 2008 the Belgian newspapers De Morgen, De Standaard and the Evening reported that the Country Court of Brussels ordered the Belgian state to pay 1,500 Euros compensation to Sahaja Yoga for wrongly labeling the movement as a sect (cult). The Centre of Information and Opinion on Harmful Sectarian Organizations (CIAOSN) had given an unfavourable report on the meditation movement which was found to be unobjective and had resulted in the movement being defamed. The state appealed. <ref>http://www.7sur7.be/7s7/fr/1502/Belgique/article/detail/255299/2008/04/25/Sahaja-Yoga-n-est-pas-une-secte.dhtml</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* Coney, Judith (1999) ''Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Religious Movement'', (London: Curzon Press) ISBN 0-7007-1061-2 | |||
* Srivastava, Nirmala (1997) ''Meta Modern Era'', (Vishwa Nirmala Dharma) ISBN 8186650059 | |||
* Pullar, Philippa (1984) ''The Shortest Journey'', ISBN 0-04-291018-8 | |||
* Kakar, Sudhir (1984) ''Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and Its Healing Traditions'', ISBN 0-226-42279-8 | |||
* Coney, Judith (1995) “‘Belonging to a Global Religion’: The Sociological Dimensions of International Elements in Sahaja Yoga.” ''Sociological Analysis'' 10(2):109-20. | |||
* Rai, Umesh (1993) ''Medical science enlightened: new insight into vibratory awareness for holistic health care'' (New Delhi: Life Eternal Trust) ISBN 81-900325-0-X | |||
* Descieux, Flore (1995) ''The Light of the Koran: Knowledge through Sahaja Yoga'' (Paris: La Pensee Universelle, 1995; English translation: New Delhi: Ritana Books, 1998) ISBN 8185250026 | |||
* Apte, Arun (1997) ''Music and Sahaja Yoga'' (Pune: NITL) | |||
* de Kalbermatten, Gregoire (2003) ''The Third Advent'' (New York: daisyamerica, 2003; Melbourne: Penguin Australia, 2004; Delhi: Penguin India, 2004) ISBN 1-932406-07-7 | |||
* Powell, Nigel (2004) ''Sahaja Yoga Meditation'' (Corvalis Publishing) ISBN 0-954-85190-0 | |||
* of research papers, conferences and publications relating to the Sahaja Yoga research and health center. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*{{Commons category-inline}} | |||
*{{official|https://sahajayoga.org/}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:40, 15 November 2024
Religious movement, founded in 1970 by Nirmala Srivastava
Sahaja Yoga | |
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Founder | Nirmala Srivastava (aka Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi) |
Established | 5 May 1970 |
Practice emphases | |
kundalini, meditation, self-realization |
Sahaja Yoga (सहज योग) is a religion founded in 1970 by Nirmala Srivastava (1923–2011). Nirmala Srivastava is known as Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi (trans: Revered Immaculate Mother) or simply as "Mother" by her followers, who are called Sahaja yogis.
Practitioners believe that during meditation they experience a state of self-realization produced by kundalini awakening, and that this is accompanied by the experience of thoughtless awareness or mental silence.
Shri Mataji described Sahaja Yoga as the pure, universal religion integrating all other religions. She claimed that she was a divine incarnation, more precisely an incarnation of the Holy Spirit, or the Adi Shakti of the Hindu tradition, the great mother goddess who had come to save humanity. This is also how she is regarded by most of her devotees. Sahaja Yoga has sometimes been characterized as a cult.
Etymology
The word 'Sahaja' in Sanskrit has two components: 'Saha' is 'with' and 'ja' is 'born'. A Dictionary of Buddhism gives the literal translation of Sahaja as "innate" and defines it as "denoting the natural presence of enlightenment (bodhi) or purity", and Yoga means union with the divine and refers to a spiritual path or a state of spiritual absorption. According to a book published by Sahaja Yogis, Sahaja Yoga means spontaneous and born with you meaning that the kundalini is born within us and can be awakened spontaneously, without effort.
The term 'Sahaja Yoga' goes back at least to the 15th Century Indian mystic Kabir and has also been used to refer to Surat Shabd Yoga. Sahaja can also mean 'comfortable', 'natural', or 'uncomplicated' in Hindi.
History
Before starting Sahaja Yoga, Srivastava had a reputation as a spiritual healer. In 1970, with a small group of devotees around her, she began spreading her message of Sahaja Yoga in India. As she moved with her husband to London, UK, she continued her religious activities there, and the movement grew and spread throughout Europe, by the mid-80's reaching North America. In 1989, Shri Mataji made her first trip to Russia and Eastern Europe. She did not charge for her classes, insisting that her lesson was a birthright which should be freely available to all. As of 2021, Sahaja Yoga has centers in at least 69 countries.
Beliefs and practices
The movement claims Sahaja Yoga is different from other yoga/meditations because it begins with self realization through kundalini awakening rather than as a result of performing kriya techniques or asanas. This self realization is said to be made possible by the presence of Srivastava often through a photograph of her. The teachings, practices and beliefs of Sahaja Yoga are mainly Hindu-based, with a predominance of elements from mystical traditions, as well as local customs of India. There are however elements of Christian origin, such as the eternal battle between good and evil. References to a variety of other religious, spiritual, mystical as well as modern scientific frameworks are also interwoven in Srivastava's teachings, although to a lesser degree.
Religious sociologist Judith Coney has reported facing a challenge in getting behind what she called "the public facade" of Sahaja Yoga. She described Sahaja yogis as adopting a low profile with uncommitted individuals to avoid unnecessary conflict.
Coney observed that the movement tolerates a variety of world views and levels of commitment with some practitioners choosing to remain on the periphery.
Kundalini
Further information: KundaliniWithin the Indian mystic tradition, kundalini awakening has long been a much sought-after goal that was thought rare and hard to attain. Sahaja Yoga is distinctive in claiming to offer a quick and easy path to such an awakening.
Meditation
Meditation is one of the foundational rituals within Sahaja Yoga. The technique taught emphasises the state of "thoughtless-awareness" that is said to be achieved.
Role of women
Judith Coney has written that in general, Nirmala Srivastava's vision for the role of women within Sahaja Yoga was one of "feminine domesticity and compliance".
Some parents of Sahaja 'yogists', analyzing Nirmala Srivastava's remarks, noted that women play a subordinate role. The texts of Nirmala Srivastava say that "if you are a woman and you want to dominate, then Sahaja Yoga will have difficulty in curing you" and that women should be "docile" and "domestic". Judith Coney writes that women "are valued as mothers and wives but are limited to these roles and are not encouraged to be active or powerful, except within the domestic sphere and behind the scenes".
Coney has observed that "Gender roles for women and men within Sahaja Yoga are clearly specified and highly segregated, and positions of authority in the group are held almost exclusively by the men". Coney writes that the ideal of womanhood promoted within Sahaja Yoga draws both on the ideal wifely qualities of the goddess Lakshmi and on wider Hindu traditions. Coney believes these traditions are summed up in "The Code of Manu" which holds that woman should be honoured and adorned but kept dependent on men in the family. Women are also described in this book as "dangerous" and needing to be guarded from temptation.
Coney has written that Nirmala Srivastava did not display consistent views on women but gave a number of messages about the status of women. On the one hand she said women are not inferior but described the sexes as complementary. Describing the man as the head of the family, she likened the woman's status to the heart: "The head always feels he decides, but the brain always knows that is the heart one has to cater, it is the heart which is all-pervading, it is the real source of everything". She regretted what she saw as the loss of respect for women in society in both the East and West. However, she viewed Western feminism suspiciously, seeing it as a "route to damnation" because it required women to deviate from what she thought was their true nature.
Family
Human rights lawyer Sylvie Langlaude has described the configuration of families within Sahaja Yoga as having "a distinctive image and model of childhood", noting that from birth children become familiarised with the movement's beliefs and Nirmala Srivastava's status by being closely involved in its day-to-day rituals including meditation, foot-soaking, and devotional singing. This is in line with the other religions Langlaude examined, who concluded that "almost all traditions include informal nurturing within the family and slightly more formal nurturing within a religious community", and that children "are also initiated by their parents to a number of initiation rituals and to ceremonies and festivals."
The subtle system – chakras and nadis
Sahaja Yoga believes that in addition to our physical body there is a subtle body composed of nadis (channels) and chakras (energy centres). Nirmala Srivastava equates the Sushumna nadi with the parasympathetic nervous system, the Ida nadi with the left and the Pingala nadi with the right sides of the sympathetic nervous system. Psychoanalyst Sudhir Kakar writes that Nirmala Srivastava's additions to this widespread traditional 'tantric' model include giving it a scientific, neurological veneer, an elaboration of the health aspects and an introduction of notions of traditional Christian morality.
Chakras do not physically exist but in a variety of ancient meditation practices they are believed to be part of the subtle body.
Apostasy
In common with similar movements, most people who have left the Sahaja Yoga movement do not describe their experience as being unremittingly negative, often finding something positive they can say. Nevertheless, in interviews with ex-members Judith Coney heard various complaints, including that they had experienced unwanted arranged marriage, had been dismayed by the difference between the reality of the movement and what they had expected, and had found their time in the movement frightening.
The ex-members who believed they had gained some form of supernatural protection from being in the movement were generally fearful of being exposed to retribution for having left, perhaps in the form of a terminal illness or fatal accident.
Eschatology
Within the Sahaja Yoga belief system, because we are in the final phase of the world (Kali Yuga) before the apocalypse, the Earth is rich in demons, who use satanic forces to possess people, impersonate gurus, and spread evil.
Judith Coney writes that Nirmala Srivastava claimed to be Adi Shakti, who had returned to earth to save it from "demonic influences."
Coney writes that Nirmala Srivastava identified what she saw as increased decadence in society as the work of demons "intent on dragging human beings to hell".
Organization
Vishwa Nirmala Dharma (trans: Universal Pure Religion, also known as Sahaja Yoga International) is the organizational part of the movement. It is a registered organization in countries such as Colombia, the United States of America, and Austria. It is registered as a religion in Spain.
Membership statistics
There are no available statistical data about Sahaja Yoga membership. In 2001, the number of core members worldwide was estimated to be 10,000, in addition to 100,000 practitioners more or less in the periphery. There are varying reports about the movement's distribution worldwide. According to the Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi Sahaja Yoga World Foundation, Sahaja Yoga centers are established in over 140 countries. In a news article in Indian Express published on the occasion of Srivastava's death in 2011, however, Sahaja Yoga centers were said to exist in 140 countries.
International Sahaja Public School
Main article: International Sahaja Public SchoolThe International Sahaja Public School in Dharamsala founded in 1990, teaches around 250 international students annually as of 1999, and has accepted children from the age of 6.
Yuvashakti
Sahaja Yoga's youth movement is called "Yuvashakti" (also "Nirmal Shakti Yuva Sangha"), from the Sanskrit words Yuva (Youth) and Shakti (Power).
The movement is active in forums such as the World Youth Conference and TakingITGlobal which aim at discussing global issues, and ways of solving them.
The Yuvashakti participated in the 2000 "Civil Society & Governance Project" in which they were "instrumental in reaching out to women from the poor communities and providing them with work".
Vishwa Nirmal Prem Ashram
The Vishwa Nirmala Prem Ashram is a not-for profit project by the NGO Vishwa Nirmala Dharma (Sahaja Yoga International) located in Noida, Delhi, India, opened in 2003. The ashram is a "facility where women and girls are rehabilitated by being taught meditation and other skills that help them overcome trauma".
Funding
According to the dictates of their founder, the methods for practicing Sahaja Yoga are made available free of charge to those interested. Nevertheless, according to the official Sahaja Yoga website there is a fee for attending international pujas to cover costs.
According to author David V. Barrett, "Shri Mataji neither charged for her lectures nor for her ability to give Self Realization, nor does one have to become a member of this organization. She insisted that one cannot pay for enlightenment and she continued to denounce the false self-proclaimed 'gurus' who are more interested in the seekers' purse than their spiritual ascent".
Cult classification
Cult expert Jean-Marie Abgrall has written that Sahaja Yoga exhibits the classic characteristics of a cult in the way it conditions its members. These include having a god-like leader, disrupting existing relationships, and promising security and specific benefits while demanding loyalty and financial support. Abgrall writes that the true activities of the cult are hidden behind the projection of a positive image and an explicit statement that "Sahaja yoga is not a cult".
Judith Coney has written that members "disguised some of their beliefs" from non-members. Coney writes people who had left the movement welcomed the chance to talk to her as an independent researcher, but that some were fearful of reprisals if they did so, and others found their experiences too painful to revisit. Most were unwilling to talk to her "on the record".
An "A-Z of cults" in The Guardian reported that adherents of Sahaja Yoga found a cult designation "particularly offensive" but that the movement had been plagued by accounts of children being separated from their parents and of large financial donations made to Nirmala Srivastava.
In 2001, The Independent reported the allegation made by some ex-members, that Sahaja Yoga is a cult which aims to control the minds of its members. Ex-members said that the organisation insists all family ties are broken and all communication with them cease, that crying children can be seen as being possessed by demons, that negative and positive vibrations need "clearing", and that being a member of the group is very expensive. In 2005, The Record reported that some critics who feel that the group is a cult have started their own websites.
In 2005 the Belgian State organisation IACSSO (Informatie- en Adviescentrum inzake de Schadelijke Sektarische Organisaties) issued an advisory against Sahaja Yoga. The advisory categorizes Sahaja Yoga as a synretic cult ("syncretische cultus") based on the Hindu tradition, and warns that the recruitment techniques used by Sahaja Yoga pose a risk to the public in general and young people in particular. Sahaja Yoga Belgium sued IACSSO and preliminary rulings were found in their favour, adjudging that Sahaja Yoga was "not a cult". However, on appeal in 2011 these preliminary rulings were overturned and in a final judgement it was found that Sahaja Yoga had been unable to refute IACSSO's statements.
In 2013, De Morgen reported that the Belgian Department of State Security monitors how often politicians are contacted and lobbied by organizations. The list of organizations includes Sahaja Yoga.
In 2001, The Evening Standard reported that Sahaja Yoga has been "described as a dangerous cult" and "has a dissident website created by former members". The reporter, John Crace, wrote about an event he attended and noted that a Sahaja Yoga representative asked him to feel free to talk to whomever he wanted. He remarked, "Either their openness is a PR charm offensive, or they genuinely have nothing to hide." He proposed that "one of the key definitions of a cult is the rigour with which it strives to recruit new members" and concluded that there was no aggressive recruitment squeeze.
David V. Barrett wrote that some former members say that they were expelled from the movement because they "resisted influence that Mataji had over their lives". According to Barrett, the movement's founder's degree of control over members' lives has given rise to concerns. The Austrian Ministry for Environment, Youth and Family states that "Sahaja Yoga" regards Nirmala Srivastava as an authority who cannot be questioned.
References
- "Experience Your Self Realization". sahajayoga.org. Vishwa Nirmala Dharma. 12 June 2006. Archived from the original on 19 November 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2011.
- Jones, Lindsey, ed. (2005). Encyclopedia of Religion (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA . ISBN 978-0-02-865997-8.
- ^ Coney, Judith (1999). Sahaja Yoga: Socializing Processes in a South Asian New Movement. Richmond: Curzon Press. ISBN 0-7007-1061-2.
- ^ "Sahaja Yoga founder Nirmala Devi is dead". The Indian Express. Express News Service. 25 February 2011. Archived from the original on 5 May 2017.
- ^ Srivastava, Nirmala (1989). Sahaja Yoga Book One (2nd ed.). Australia: Nirmala Yoga.
- ^ INFORM staff. "Meditation and Mindfulness". INFORM – the information network on religious movements. Archived from the original on 4 July 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
- ^ Sudhir Kakar (1991). Shamans, Mystics and Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and its Healing Traditions. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226422798.
- "Prophecies and Fulfillments". Sahaja Yoga Meditation. Vishwa Nirmala Dharma. 7 May 2017. Archived from the original on 12 May 2017.
- ^ "Advies van het Informatie- en Adviescentrum inzake de Schadelijke Sektarische Organisaties (IACSSO) over Sahaja Yoga" (in Dutch). IACSSO. 7 March 2005.
- ^ Abgrall, Jean-Marie (2000). Soul Snatchers: The Mechanics of Cults. Algora Publishing. pp. 139–144.
- "Sahaja". A Dictionary of Buddhism. Oxford University Press. 2004. ISBN 978-0-19-172653-8. Archived from the original on 28 May 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
- Ray, Nihar Ranjan (October 2000). "The concept of 'Sahaj' in Guru Nanak's theology". The Sikh Review. 48 (562). Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2011.
- Soami Ji Maharaj (1934). Sar Bachan: An Abstract of the Teachings of Soami Ji Maharaj, the Founder of the Radha Soami System of Philosophy and Spiritual Science: The Yoga of the Sound Current. Translated by Sardar Sewa Singh and Julian P. Johnson. Beas, India: Radha Soami Satsang Beas.
- Melton, J. Gordon (2009). Encyclopedia of American religions (8th ed.). Detroit: Gale. p. 1005. ISBN 978-0-7876-6384-1.
- Posner, Michael (11 March 2011). "Spiritual leader founded Sahaja yoga movement". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 19 March 2011.
- "Sahaja Yoga Worldwide Contacts – Locate Sahaja Yoga Near You". sahajayoga.org. Archived from the original on 26 February 2021. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
- Coward HG, ed. (2000). "Contributors". The South Asian Religious Diaspora in Britain, Canada, and the United States (SUNY Series in Religious Studies. State University of New York Press. p. 289. ISBN 0791445100.
- Coney, Judith (1999). Palmer, Susan J.; Hardman, Charlotte (eds.). Children in New Religions. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-2620-1.
- "Administrative Panel Decision 'Vishwa Nirmala Dharma a.k.a. Sahaja Yoga v. Sahaja Yoga Ex-Members Network and SD Montford' Case No. D 2001-0467". WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center. 16 June 2001.
- Sylvie Langlaude (2007). "Chapter 1: Religious Children". The Right of the Child to Religious Freedom in International Law. Brill. p. 33-4.
- Sudhir Kakar wrote in his book Shamans, Mystics and Doctors, "Essentially, Nirmala Srivastava's model of the human psyche is comprised of the traditional tantric and hatha yoga notions of the subtle body, with its 'nerves' and 'centers,' and fuelled by a pervasive 'subtle energy' that courses through both the human and the divine, through the body and the cosmos. Nirmala Srivastava's contributions to this ancient model are not strikingly original: as a former medical student she has sought to give it a scientific, neurological veneer; as a former faith healer, she has elaborated upon those aspects of the model that are concerned with sickness and health; as someone born into an Indian Christian family she has tried to introduce notions of traditional Christian morality into an otherwise amoral Hindu view of the psyche." See Kakar (1991), p. 196
- Shermer, Michael, ed. (2002). The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 538. ISBN 978-1-57607-653-8.
- Sharma, Arvind (2006). A Primal Perspective on the Philosophy of Religion. Springer Verlag. pp. 193–196. ISBN 978-1-4020-5014-5.
- "Registro Publico Entidades Religiosas 30-06-2004" [Public Registry of Religious Entities]. Ministry of the Interior and Justice: Republic of Colombia. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
- "List of ECOSOC/Beijing and New Accredited NGOs that attended the special session of the General Assembly". United Nations. Archived from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 26 November 2011.
- "Austria – 2006 Report on International Religious Freedom". Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor: US Dept. of State. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
- "Religion in Spain". Sahaja Worldwide News and Announcements (SWAN). sahajayoga.org. Vishwa Nirmala Dharma. 19 July 2006. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2011.
- Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi Sahaja Yoga World Foundation (7 May 2017). "From Nimala Srivastava to Shri Mataji". Shri Mataji: A Life Dedicated to Humanity. Archived from the original on 28 May 2017. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
- Wittkamper, Jonah, ed. (2002). "Guide to the Global Youth Movement" (PDF). youthlink.org. Global Youth Action Network. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 December 2005.
- Tatke, Vinita (February 2000). "Case Study Civil Society & Governance Project". Archived from the original on 3 January 2004. Retrieved 6 November 2006.
- Khanna, Arshiya (16 November 2006). "A New Childhood". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 18 October 2012. Retrieved 4 November 2007.
- "An interview with Gisela Matzer" (PDF). Blossom Times. Vol. 1, no. 3. 31 August 2007. p. 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 September 2007.
- "Puja/Dakshina Costs". Sahaja Worldwide Announcements and News (SWAN). sahajayoga.org. Vishwa Nirmala Dharma. 20 July 2005. Archived from the original on 15 September 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2011.
- ^ Barrett, David V. (2001). The New Believers. Cassell. pp. 297–8. ISBN 0-304-35592-5.
- Cornelius, Robert (14 May 1995). "A-Z of cults". The Guardian.
- ^ "Shri who must be obeyed". The Independent. 13 July 2001. Archived from the original on 19 January 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
- Chadwick, John (24 July 2005). "Hundreds fill weekend with devotion, bliss". The Record. Bergen County, New Jersey. Archived from the original on 20 March 2007.
- ^ Torfs R, Vrielink J (2019). "State and Church in Belgium". In Robbers G (ed.). State and Church in the European Union (3rd ed.). Nomos Verlag. p. 24. doi:10.5771/9783845296265-11. ISBN 978-3-84-529626-5.
- "Sahaja Yoga is geen sekte" [Sahaja Yoga is not a cult]. De Morgen (in Dutch). 22 July 2008. Archived from the original on 21 January 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2011.
- Martin, Buxant; Samyn, Steven (2 February 2013). "Staatsveiligheid houdt Wetstraat in de gaten" [State keeps an eye Wetstraat]. De Morgen (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
- Crace, John (18 July 2001). "Monday night with the divine mother". London Evening Standard.
- Ministry for Environment, Youth and Family: Austria (1999). Sekten! Wissen schützt [Sects! Knowledge Protects]. Translated by cisar.org (2nd ed.). Vienna: Druckerei Berger. Archived from the original on 21 June 2008. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
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External links
- Media related to Sahaja Yoga at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
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