Prem Rawat (Prem Pal Singh Rawat) whose devotees call him Maharaji (meaning Ultimate Ruler) first came to attention in the West as Guru Maharaj Ji - the self-proclaimed Perfect Master and Lord of the Universe ridiculed in the media as a fat, squeaky-voiced God boy. He had inherited his titles and position as the Satguru, The True Revealer of Light and Spiritual Master of the Divine Light Mission, India (Divya Sandesh Parishad) when his father died in 1966. His father, Hans Rawat, was a successful Indian guru, self titled HRH (His Royal Highness) Yogiraj Param Sant Satgurudev Shri Hans Ji Maharaj. As a child the youngest Rawat son was informally called Sant Ji, more formally Balyogeshwar ("Born King of the Yogis") and even more formally Param Sant Satgurudev Shri Sant Ji Maharaj. In the West Rawat dropped these more verbose titles in the early 1980's and instructed his followers to call him Maharaji. He has also changed the names of his organisations many times: Divine Light Mission (DLM), World Welfare Association (WWA), World Peace Corps (WPC) and Divine United Organisation (DUO) became Elan Vital in the early 1980's and in 2001 The Prem Rawat Foundation (TPRF) was created and from 2010 his major orgs are Words Of Peace Global (WOPG) registered in Holland, Words of Peace International (WOPI) in the USA, HDSK (Human Development through Self Knowledge) in Great Britain and Raj Vidya Kender (Royal Knowledge Society) in India. He no longer claims to be an Incarnation of God but an internationally famous humanitarian leader and teacher of peace. He's neither.
Viva Magazine
Page 100
People You Should Forget
Guru Maharaj Ji
by Gilbert Choate
As
sure as there's a sucker born every minute, so every age has
its sage, and the present presence on earth of the All and
the One Almighty Lord is the divine, perfect, supreme,
fifteen-year-old Shri Guru Maharaj Ji ("The Kid")-at least
to hear him tell it. There are, to hear them tell it, other
candidates for the office, and they flourish in my hometown
of New York City. They are a lively lot and they seem to
relish the curiosity and ridicule they draw. New York is
famous for its threadbare God-mad jerkdom, and I suppose
that each upon expiring is hailed as a new saint in heaven.
After all, if the proper index of a seer's corner on truth
is his chronic poverty and obscurity, then there is
something holy about all these bums.
But where does that leave our prehensile swami, whose church operates a chain of secondhand shops and a small fleet of elegant automobiles and aircraft under the tax-free status of "religion"? Well-heeled, indeed, whatever the ultimate disposition of his soul. The Maharaj's spiritual message is somewhat as follows: mortals can never really know God, but by subscribing to Maharaj Ji's magnetic presence they can get pretty close. Moreover, the end of the world is nigh and only those in on the Messiah's secret have a chance of attaining any postapocalyptic grace. What is his secret? Even the initiates don't know. The method of initiation is to captivate alienated and world-weary middle-class youths like former radical and "Chicago Eight" defendant Rennie Davis, plus a few of the dumbest, most inarticulate and strung-out local hippies, and put them through a few days of meditative starvation, twist them like pretzels into the gut-wrenching configurations of a double-jointed veteran yogi, then depress their eyelids with the fingers of one of the holy higher-ups. This produces a retinal image called "Divine Light" by the premies (as the faithful are called) and "rapture of the depths" to those trapped in disabled submarines. If anyone should wonder why this simple, unpleasant, and purely physical phenomenon is being passed off as the veritable abracadabra of salvation, he is told that it is but symbolic of the inner somethingness of the mystic mocha moocher.
One of the less interesting projects of the avatar is And It Is Divine, a monthly slick-paper magazine on which he serves in the capacity of Supreme Editor-in-Chief. It's doubtful that many of the following items were reported in its pages:
Well, the Supreme Master may well sing a different tune when his voice changes. Or he may be swept away by polio, tetanus, typhoid, kwashiorkor, measles, chicken pox, or some other plague or famine that annually kills thousands of Indian tots. Anyway, the sooner he ascends in his chariot of flame the safer I will rest: the latest rumor is that his peace-loving parishioners have joined hands with the puissant Kung Fu martial-arts cultists.
And Jack Anderson wonders why the U.S. backed Pakistan.
Prem Rawat's "Knowledge" has three parts: regularly listening to his speeches, doing voluntary work for organisations serving him or donating money and daily meditation correctly practicing the four techniques he recommends. The techniques are so simple it's hard to see how they could be practiced incorrectly. First technique ("Divine Light") involves sticking your thumb and middle finger on your eyeballs (NB: with eyes closed) and your index finger between your eyebrows. Second technique: ("Heavenly Music") poking your thumbs into your ears and listening. Third technique: ("Holy Name") thinking about your breathing (NB: continue to breathe). Fourth technique: ("Nectar") curling your tongue backwards and tasting. Rawat's father taught slightly different techniques but either way it's difficult to see how these could produce the benefits claimed for them especially as Rawat claims His Knowledge is the only method of attaining real happiness and love in this life.