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The San Francisco Weekly/March 10,
1999 - article taken from RickRoss.com
By Helen Goa
Since the '60s, the Ananda Church
of Self-Realization has grown from a Northern
California commune into a worldwide New Age empire.
Its leader has grown fond of sex with young believers.
The pews are steadily filling up, and the Sunday
service is about to start. The parishioners, mostly
middle-aged, ordinary-looking couples, sit quietly,
their graying, balding, and silver heads rocking
to and fro, humming along with the soothing chanting
of the choir. The church is warm, tranquil, and
faintly fragrant with burning incense. The altar
table has been elegantly laid out with a voluminous
blooming bouquet of colorful carnations, flanked
by two thick white candles on golden holders.
Above the table are five gold-framed portraits
arranged in the shape of a cross. Jesus is at
the center of the display; the other four images
portray Indian gurus, or spiritual guides.
The topmost portrait is an eerie
rendering of Babaji, an ostensibly androgynous
being with long hair and pursed feminine lips.
According to the church, Babaji is an immortal
spiritual master who has lived in the Himalayas
for thousands of years. The bottom portrait is
of Paramhansa Yogananda, author of the 50s
spiritual classic Autobiography of a Yogi; hes
shown with his signature long, dark, wavy hair
and ocher robe. On either side of Jesus are Sri
Yukteswar, an imposing silver-bearded, silver-haired
man, and Lahiri Mahasaya, another old man with
a deeply furrowed forehead and eyes shut in two
thin lines. Both are spiritual masters who preceded
Yogananda, according to this churchs teachings,
which say that the five pictured beings are a
divinely ordained line of perfected souls
who assumed human form to guide and inspire mankind
to realize God.
At 10 oclock, the chanting
trails off. Church bells are rung. A solemn procession
of five white-robed ministers, reminiscent of
a Greek chorus, emerges from behind the altar.
The congregation rises to its feet instantly to
greet them.
How is everyone? asks
the leading minister. "A-wake and rea-dy!!
the 100-strong congregation responds enthusiastically
in a chorus.
For the next hour-and-a-half, the
ministers -- who, robes aside, are nondescript,
baby-boomer, mom-and-pop types -- take turns leading
meditation, reading from the Hindu spiritual classic
Baghavad Gita, and delivering a sermon. From time
to time, the choir rouses the congregation with
guitars and harmoniums, and the church members
plunge into fervent devotional chanting. The service
is lively, punctuated at turns with humor, solemnity,
and palpable rapture.
At the end, everyone rises. After
earnestly rubbing their hands together, parishioners
hold their palms outward. Invoking their gurus
on the altar, they ask to be made pure channels
of Gods love, so they can bless the
world with their energy.
For a decade now, the Ananda Church
of Self-Realization has been holding such Sunday
services in a former Roman Catholic church in
downtown Palo Alto. Steeped in Indian mystic traditions,
the church holds that human beings are expressions
of the divine spirit, and that the purpose of
human life is to become more aware of that divine
spirit within ourselves. The first portion of
the churchs name -- Ananda -- means divine
bliss in Sanskrit. The Ananda approach to
the other portion of the name -- self-realization
-- involves steadfast meditation and yoga, performed
several times a day.
From its beginnings in tents and
geodesic domes 30 years ago in the Sierra Nevada
foothills, Ananda has grown to include a vast,
far-flung empire of churches, meditation centers,
businesses, and world brotherhood colonies
in places as far away as Italy and Australia.
In New Age circles, Ananda has been
the poster child of cooperative spiritual communities
for years. In the late 80s, the New York
Times went to Anandas headquarters and flagship
colony near Nevada City and reported excitedly
that the church was a successful exception to
the hippie communes that were founded in the 1960s
and have long since faded.
Recently, though, Ananda has revealed
itself to be less an exception than an example
of the rule of wayward 60s communalism.
Last year, a Redwood City jury handed
down a million-plus-dollar judgment against Anandas
longtime spiritual director, Donald J. Walters
(known generally as Swami Kriyananda), another
senior official of the church, and the church
itself, for the sexual exploitation of a former
church member. In that case, six women testified
under oath that the swami had taken sexual advantage
of them when they were impressionable twentysomethings
in search of spiritual advancement.
And now Anandas leaders have
embarked on an unusual method of fighting the
judgment: filing for protection under Chapter
11 of the bankruptcy code. To date, the filing
has allowed the church to avoid paying the judgment,
but it is being challenged as a fraud upon the
bankruptcy court.
Anandas form of self-realization
seems to include a fair amount of self- delusion.
Deep in the heavily wooded San Juan
Ridge, a few thousand feet up in the Sierra Nevada
foothills, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Gary Snyder
pours tea and relates his experience as a longtime
neighbor to the Ananda community headquarters.
Some 30 years ago, Snyder, a lifelong
Buddhist, met Donald Walters through a mutual
friend who was then president of the San Francisco
Zen Center. The trio, along with Snyders
good friend (and fellow beat poet) Allen Ginsberg,
purchased 160 acres of pristine land in the foothills.
At the time, they shared an interest in setting
up cabins in this secluded area.
A couple of years after acquiring
the land, Snyder says, he built a house and permanently
settled in it. He contented himself with the simple
home, but over the years witnessed his partner
Walters build a spiritual community with a worldwide
following. It had been our understanding
that all he wanted was a cabin for himself,
Snyder says.
In the anything-goes environment
of the Bay Area, Walters had already attracted
a small following. Young and idealistic spiritual
seekers, enamored with his status as a direct
disciple of Yogananda, literally followed
Walters into the woods.
At first, the conditions were harsh.
Tents, yurts, trailers, and geodesic domes served
as homes. There was no running water, or electricity.
A 1976 fire burned almost the entire fledgling
Ananda community to a crisp. But Walters and his
followers persevered. They expanded steadily,
purchasing several hundred more acres of the foothills
and bringing in ever more seekers of self-realization.
Ananda became more and more famous
as Walters tirelessly promoted it around the country.
People learned about his spiritual vision through
the endless stream of books, articles, and audiocassettes
he churned out. One can say through the
years, the Ananda community has been steady in
its pressure trying to expand, Snyder says.
Tension between Ananda and its neighbors reached
an all time high when Ananda attempted to incorporate
as a town in the early 80s. Snyder and his
neighbors shot down the plan, but the failure
did not faze the church, which turned its energy
to building a self-sufficient village on the 900
acres of land it came to acquire.
Now, the Ananda community near Nevada
City is home to about 300 people, and has its
own elementary and middle schools, dairy farm,
bakery, market, publishing house (two of them,
in fact), medical clinic, construction guild,
and even a telephone system called Ananda Bell.
In Nevada City, Ananda also runs a highly successful
health food store/vegetarian restaurant.
Ananda has stretched its wings in
the outside world as well, becoming a conglomerate
of businesses, meditation centers, and world brotherhood
colonies that stretch from the Bay Area to Portland
to Assisi, Italy. Recognizing the groups
global reach, Warner Books struck a deal with
Ananda in 1994 to publish a line of Walters
books.
Today in the Bay Area, Ananda owns
the highly profitable and well-known metaphysical
bookstore East West in downtown Mountain View
and another used bookstore directly across the
street. And just blocks from its Palo Alto church,
Ananda has a thriving spiritual community of more
than a hundred, living in a cluster of apartment
buildings partially owned by church members.
From outward appearances, Ananda
might seem justified in referring to itself as
one of the countrys most successful
intentional communities.
Ford Greene is a man with a mission:
hunting gurus and busting cults. He doesn't look
his 46 years; he doesn'tt look much like a lawyer
either. Trim, tall, and athletic, his dress tends
toward jeans, sandals, and flannel shirts.
For the past 16 years, Greene has
run a one-man cult-prosecuting operation from
his San Anselmo office. He has butted heads with
the Rev. Sun Myung Moons Unification Church,
the Church of Scientology, and the San Rafael-based
Johanine Daist Communion, led by Bubba Free John
(aka Franklin Jones), who was exposed in the 80s
as having sexually enslaved some of his female
devotees.
In 1994, Greene filed a sexual harassment
lawsuit against the Ananda Church of Self-Realization
on behalf of 31-year-old Anne-Marie Bertolucci
of Palo Alto, a former Ananda member. The lawsuit
alleged Bertolucci had been sexually exploited
by church founder and spiritual director Swami
Kriyananda, and a married senior church minister,
Danny Levin. It also accused the church of fraud.
Bertoluccis association with
Ananda began innocuously. At Anandas East
West bookstore in 1991 she saw a flier for a meditation
class, and decided to attend. The flier promised
that the class would help her be stronger,
healthier, more youthful and energetic.
A computer programmer making good money, Bertolucci
was looking for stress management techniques.
The flier seemed opportune.
After taking that first meditation
class, Bertolucci went to many more, eventually
becoming hooked on learning ever more advanced
meditation techniques and yoga postures.
Six months later, Bertolucci joined
the church, where she stopped eating meat and
using makeup. Within a year, she had separated
from her husband, who opposed her increasing involvement
with Ananda, and gone to the Ananda community
in the Sierras, telling friends she was leaving
to find spiritual redemption.
At Ananda, Bertolucci held various
low-paying jobs at church-related businesses.
Danny Levin, vice president of the church-owned
publishing house where she worked and a married
senior minister, befriended Bertolucci immediately.
The befriending soon crossed into sexual contact
that included touching her breasts during church
ceremonies held in the office, rubbing himself
against her until he ejaculated, and having her
perform oral sex on him.
Levin stated that he had recognized
[Bertolucci] as a lover and wife from past lives,
the lawsuit alleged. [He] treated [her]
like a whore, yet told [her] that he was very
much in love with her.
At the same time, Swami Kriyananda
was also taking advantage of her sexually, Bertolucci
claimed.
A year after joining, Bertolucci
left the Ananda Church, a broken woman who, her
lawsuit claimed, was severely depressed, suicidal,
and without a job.
After Bertolucci filed suit, a dozen
ex-Ananda members stepped up to support her case.
Six women gave sworn testimony detailing various
forms of what they considered sexual exploitation
by the swami.
In the past five years, Greene and
Michael Flynn, a Rancho Santa Fe lawyer who also
has a cult-busting history, have put up hundreds
of thousands of their own money to finance the
case against Ananda.
Several months ago, their effort
paid off. A Redwood City jury handed down a verdict
in favor of Bertolucci.
In the verdict, Ananda was found
to have misrepresented itself as a safe
religious organization and to have failed to stop
Walters and Levins sexual transgressions.
The church was ordered to pay more than $300,000.
Walters was judged to have misrepresented
himself as a monk, and to have caused Bertolucci
emotional trauma, and was ordered to pay $285,000
in compensatory damages, and another $1 million
in punitive damages. (On appeal, the punitive
damages were reduced to $400,000.) A sexual harassment
claim was dismissed before the case went to the
jury.
Levin was ordered to pay $30,000
for causing Bertolucci emotional anguish.
Ford Greene is convinced that the
Ananda Church is a cult. Jon Parsons has been
a lawyer for Ananda for almost a decade now and
couldnt disagree more. A good head shorter
than Greene, pasty-faced, slightly paunchy, and
sparse- haired, Parsons is an eloquent man blessed
with a dramatic flair and an enchanting, resonant
voice.
"I have found them [Ananda
people] to be universally -- without exception
-- sincere, devoted, good people," he said
at the outset of an interview in his Palo Alto
office.
Parsons sees Bertolucci as a vengeful,
jilted lover who struck out against Ananda in
anger and pain, because she failed to lure Levin,
a married man, away from his wife and child. And
Bertoluccis lawsuit, he contends, is the
result of a conspiracy between her and the Self-Realization
Fellowship, a longtime religious rival of Ananda.
In 1991, the SRF sued Ananda over the latters
use of the term self-realization and
other intellectual property issues. Parsons won
the case for Ananda, but, he says, the SRF has
not given up appealing the decision.
A long-running, almost farcical
feud does exist between Ananda and the SRF. But
there is abundant and persuasive evidence to support
the accusations of sexual exploitation leveled
against Ananda leaders.
First, there are the declarations
by seven women who claim to have had sexual encounters
with Swami Kriyananda. They indicate Walters has
a history of asking for massages from his impressionable
young female devotees, and turning the massages
into sexual events.
Jane (not her real name) first met
Walters in the late 70s at a talk he gave
at a San Francisco church. She was 21 and had
found Autobiography of a Yogi inspiring. She was
immediately taken with Walters -- who advertised
himself as a direct disciple of Yogananda
-- and soon moved to the Ananda village and joined
the monastic order there.
Being 21 years old, compared
to his 55 plus years, I loved him dearly as a
father figure, she recalled in a court declaration.
In my journals I referred to him as my beloved
father. I felt secure and happy in my new found
home, working hard, for little wages, living simply,
thinking high.
Janes happiness was short-lived.
In 1981, Walters invited her to clean his house
while he was away -- an invitation that she initially
felt was an honor.
One day, Walters asked her to give
him a massage. He asked me to straddle his
back in order to access his shoulders properly.
In a few moments he asked me to take off my clothes,
as they were irritating his skin.
Jane did so, because, she contended,
[Walters] said some things which assured
me, making me feel that he was a pure channel
of God, and that I had no cause foruneasiness.
Subsequently, she said, Walters
rolled himself over and rubbed himself against
her until he ejaculated all over himself.
Jane was confounded at first but
accepted Walters continual requests for
massages that invariably led to blow jobs or hand
jobs. Ananda leaders assured her she was extremely
blessed to provide energy to him; Walters
explained to her that sex was no more than energy
going from one part of the universe to another.
Janes story is one of many.
Six other women filed similar court declarations
about sexually servicing Walters or being asked
to do so by him.
Perhaps nothing in the legal files
is as damning as evidence from one of Anandas
true believers. Greene found and filed with the
court a personal letter to Walters that seems
to indicate church leaders had long had knowledge
of Walters sexual misconduct.
Anandi Cornell, a church minister
and member since 1971, wrote the letter several
months after Bertolucci filed the lawsuit. The
letter gingerly pleads with Walters to face up
to his sexual problem.
This is something Ive
always thought had happened. ... If this sex thing
is a hidden fault (which as I said, I dont
judge you for at all -- it has been your business),
then spiritually, something must happen to release
or repay the energy around it for your liberation.
I think this lawsuit is the
vehicle to help you get free of this karma,
Cornell wrote, apparently trying to put forth
her best spiritual reasoning.
Walters never took Cornells
advice. Instead, Anandas legal team committed
a seemingly fatal mistake.
Almost a year into the lawsuit,
Anandas lawyers had yet to find hard evidence
to back up their theory that Bertolucci and the
churchs religious rivals were conspiring
with one another. Apparently desperate to find
such a link, the attorneys hired private investigators
to rummage through the legal trash of Greenes
co-counsel, Michael Flynn.
Flynn caught one of the investigators
red-handed, on his property, as the PI was fleeing
in a van.
When the judge presiding over the
trial learned of the trash-pilfering attempt,
he handed down a sweeping legal sanction that
forbade Anandas legal team from questioning
the women who had testified against Walters. When
the four-month trial ended last year, the jury
came down hard on Ananda. The judge was equally
unforgiving.
Walters conduct was
unmistakably reprehensible, the presiding
judge wrote in court documents. This court
was struck by the arrogant and uncaring attitude
demonstrated by this defendant throughout the
trial proceedings, undoubtedly a circumstance
not unnoticed by the jury.
Although Walters admitted in a court
deposition that hed had sexual contacts
with most of the women whod testified against
him, he denied the contact constituted sexual
abuse. That denial is duly repeated by faithful
Ananda members, who continue to hold him in high
regard.
I was deeply moved by [Walters]
sincerity, truthfulness, and his ability to express
a deep impersonal sense of love and forgiveness
to them, says Steve Manus, an Ananda member
who manages the church-owned vegetarian restaurant
in Nevada City. I know him to be a thoroughly
honest individual, a very kind and loving man.
Attempts to contact Walters for
this article were unsuccessful. But his charisma
is clear, even in the unforgiving form of a videotaped
deposition. Answering humiliating questions about
his sex life, Walters carried himself like a refined
gentleman of Old World grace. At 73, after heart
ailments and hip surgeries, he still looked youthful,
almost boyish.
It can truly be said that Walters
is multitalented: Hes a prolific writer,
composer, playwright, photographer, and singer.
His lifetime of work includes more than 70 books
and 400 musical pieces. His books -- mostly of
the self-help variety with such titles as How
to Use Money for Your Own Good and How to Spiritualize
Your Marriage -- offer advice on every aspect
of life.
In the training to become an Ananda
member, Walters autobiography, The Path:
One Mans Quest on the Only Path There Is,
is required reading. A trainee also must read
his edited versions of books on Hindu philosophy
and complete a course on yoga and meditation that
he designed.
At Ananda churches, members breathe
and live Walters works. Not only do they
read his books; they perform his plays, and in
rituals he created.
The source of Walters charisma,
however, is his connection to Yogananda. At age
22, Walters read Yoganandas autobiography,
and, the legend goes, it changed his life instantly.
The day after he read the book, Walters got on
a bus headed for Los Angeles, where Yoganandas
organization, the Self- Realization Fellowship,
is to this day headquartered. He was accepted
as a disciple and was subsequently initiated into
an ancient Indian monastic order that requires
one to take vows for life of poverty, chastity,
obedience, and loyalty.
From then on, Donald J. Walters
was Swami Kriyananda (a name that means divine
bliss through Kriya Yoga).
Because Yogananda is considered
the last in the Ananda line of gurus, Walters,
being his disciple, is accorded high respect.
And Walters makes constant references in his writings,
speeches, and conversations to Yogananda, whom
he and his followers refer to as Master.
It is generally understood,
now, that the wisdom in Masters teachings
resides primarily in those who have been disciples
for many years, he wrote in a recent open
letter to the Ananda community. It is also
vitally important at Ananda that other energies
not be allowed to intrude themselves, as if to
bypass Kriyananda and go straight to our gurus
for guidance and inspiration.
Anandas official college internship
Web page has an Ansel Adams-like photo at its
center: the silhouette of a man sitting in the
lotus position, meditating on a mountain peak
against blue skies. Pictures of Ananda in its
monthly publications are beautiful: bucolic images
of green open spaces with tall pines and manzanitas,
freshly painted cabins in the woods, shimmering
water with the sun reflecting off it, and the
happy faces of men, women, and children.
Anandas pamphlet about membership
says, When you join Ananda, you become part
of a great spiritual movement bringing peace and
harmony to the planet.
In real life, however, membership
in Ananda involves the progressive commitment
of ones autonomy and financial resources
to the church. One of the first steps of becoming
a member is taking a vow that says: As a
means of obtaining self-realization, I offer my
cooperative obedience and loyalty to Ananda, to
those members who are responsible for building
the community in its various aspects, and, above
all, to the living representative of the Ananda
line of gurus, the Spiritual Director of Ananda
World Brotherhood Village.
After becoming a member, one is
required to live by the Rules of Conduct
for Members, written by Walters. This handbook
spells out the often patently paternalistic rules
that govern almost every aspect of life in the
community, from marriage to work to money.
For example, if an Anandan wants
to get married, he or she needs to get approval
from the churchs marriage committee -- or
suffer the ire of the church hierarchy.
If any couple, influenced
by personal desire, decide to marry in opposition
to the communitys decision and advice, they
may not be married by an Ananda minister,
the handbook warns. Let them, instead, be
married outside the community, and not burden
their spiritual family, who have their highest
welfare sincerely at heart, with the request that
it go against its own conscience in the matter.
Similarly, should a member want
to start a business, change jobs, or build a home,
he or she must ask for church permission.
In addition to conforming their
lifestyles to the churchs dictates, members
are strongly encouraged to also offer themselves
for church service -- and to give up significant
amounts of their financial resources.
About half of Anandas members in Nevada
County work in church-related businesses, which
often pay minimum wage. All members tithe at least
10 percent of their income every month. They are
also constantly asked to donate for various church
projects and funds.
As soon as I [got] my check,
Id give it all back to the church,
says Victoria Kelly, who left Ananda in 1995,
after living there for 17 years. My ex-
husband and I came out of the church $30,000 in
debt.
As a condition of lifetime membership,
church members sign an agreement to give the house
they built on Ananda land to the church. (Since
1995, the agreement has become optional.)
Those who join Ananda with substantial
savings are solicited by church fund-raisers who
seek to obtain large unsecured loans to the church
-- backed only by the members faith in the
organization.
Before Steve Scott and his wife
joined Ananda in the early 80s, they had
three houses and drove a Mercedes-Benz. They left
in an old pickup truck with $35 in their bank
account.
Its built off the backs
of people who come on board, Scott says.
Within days of the judgment in the
Bertolucci case, Ananda filed for protection under
Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy code, effectively
preventing Bertolucci from collecting the judgment
against the church.
In the local paper, the Grass Valley
Union, an Ananda longtimer wrote publicly about
the churchs bankruptcy filing.
For nearly everyone of us
living at Ananda, mostly small families, the houses
people live in are our only asset, and the land
itself is owned by Ananda, he wrote, relating
his fear of losing his home because of the judgment
against the church. We wonder what we will
do if our homes are taken.
Actually, the church lists nearly
$10 million in assets in its bankruptcy filing,
which would appear to be more than enough to pay
the court awards without selling peoples
homes. In fact, Bertoluccis attorneys have
filed a motion with the bankruptcy court that
seeks to dismiss Anandas bankruptcy filing,
alleging it was filed in bad faith, as a way of
avoiding payment of court judgments against the
church.
The motion contends, among other
things, that the church fabricated $5 million
in debts it owes to its own members,
in an apparent attempt to make Ananda seem to
be in severe financial trouble, and unable to
pay Bertolucci and her lawyers. The motion quotes
a letter sent by Anandas own lawyer that
appears to admit the Chapter 11 filing is, primarily,
an attempt to frustrate -- or, at least, greatly
delay -- Bertolucci and her lawyers from collecting
their court awards.
Ananda is currently in settlement
discussions with Bertoluccis lawyers. The
bankruptcy court was scheduled to hear arguments
on whether to dismiss the churchs bankruptcy
filing shortly after this article went to press.
Members of the Ananda Awareness
Network, an informal group of disgruntled ex-Ananda
members centered in Nevada City, and their allies
have vigorously supported the Bertolucci case,
monitoring it almost daily. They have even set
up a Web site to warn people about what they say
is the dark side of the church.
In recent interviews, the anti-Ananda
camp expressed amazement at the lack of change
at Ananda in the wake of the Bertolucci case.
The same people who have been in power at
Ananda for the last few decades are still in power,
said David Reed, a longtime Ridge resident who
supports the Network.
In the middle of the Bertolucci
trial, Walters did retire as spiritual director
of Ananda. But since then, he has lived comfortably
in an Ananda community in Assisi, Italy, in a
brand-new home Ananda members bought and furnished
for him. He keeps in touch with Ananda communities
in the U.S. via monthly videotapes. Senior Ananda
members fly to Italy to see him.
Their whole key is their addiction
to Swami Kriyananda, and the illusion of who he
is, a former Ananda member says. They
are still dangerous for people, as long as they
deny the whole thing.
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