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SEXUAL HEALING
by Mary Finnigan
(from the London paper, The Guardian, 10/01/95)
The Tibetan lama Sogyal Rimpoche is being sued
for $10 million in the United States by a woman
who alleges sexual harassment, coercion and abuse.
Sogyal (Rimpoche is an honorary title meaning
Precious Jewel) has been teaching Buddhist meditation
for more than 20 years, with a world-wide following
and meditation centres known as The Rigpa Fellowship
in London, France, Ireland, America and Australia.
He is the author of a best-seller, The Tibetan
Book of Living And Dying, and appeared in Bertolucci's
film Little Buddha. The Rigpa Fellowship in London
has issued a letter informing its members that
a suit has been brought against Sogyal Rimpoche.
Although he is not a monk, and has not taken vows
of celibacy, he is accused of using his position
to obtain sexual favours. Allegations like these
threaten to blow a hole in the aura of asceticism
and austerity surrounding Buddhism in the West.
In the late 1960s, western hippies seeking spiritual
enlightenment were drawn to the Tibetans' exuberant,
colourful style. Tibet was seen as a Buddhist
Shangri-La -- a far cry from the reality of a
country under repressive Chinese occupation.
In the seventies, rumours started to circulate
about other globe-trotting Buddhist gurus, who
were said to be seducing their students and behaving
more like spiritual barons than spiritual mentors,
exercising _droit du seigneur_ among their followers.
The late Trungpa Rimpoche was one of the first
high-ranking Tibetan lamas to learn English, which
he studied at Oxford in the mid-sixties. He fathered
a child while still a monk, discarded his robes
and settled in America, where he gained a reputation
as an inspired meditation teacher. He became a
role model for others, including Sogyal Rimpoche.
He was also an alcoholic and a notorious womaniser.
He died of drink in 1987. Before his death, he
chose Osel Tenzin, an American student as his
Successor. Osel died of Aids, after passing the
HIV virus to several of his students.
Although not all Tibetan teachers are monks -
many have renounced their vows and some are from
non-celibate traditions - if a sexual relationship
arises, the imbalance of power in the teacher-pupil
relationship can lay the student open to abuse.
Many Buddhists see this as a contravention of
the moral code which frowns on all actions that
cause harm.
At a conference of western Buddhist teachers in
India last year, the Dalai Lama urged delegates
not to be afraid of criticising corrupt gurus.
"If you cannot find any other way of dealing with
the problem," he said, "tell the newspapers."
Last year, an American woman and former pupil
of Sogyal decided to bring a civil case anonymously,
and was allowed by the court in Santa Cruz, California,
to use the pseudonym Janice Doe. She says in her
suit that she approached Sogyal at a time of a
time of confusion, shortly after her fathers death.
According to the suit, Sogyal told her that "through
devotion and his spiritual instruction, she could
purify her family's karma". The woman alleges
he seduced her the next day, claiming that she
would be "strengthened and healed by having sex
with him".
However unconvincing such an argument may sound,
the Zen priest Yvonne Rand, who is counselling
Janice Doe, points out that the relationship between
guru and disciple is one of power and submission.
People who seek guidance from a spiritual master
want to believe what he or she tells them.
"Many women who seek out spiritual teachers come
from dysfunctional families. They may have experienced
physical and/or sexual abuse, had no father or
bad father relationships, so are looking for a
good father. This creates blind spots in their
perception of a teacher."
Rand is emphatic that such high risk relationships
rarely benefit both parties. This opinion is shared
by other women who have had sexual liaisons with
their gurus.
"I was touched by his need for me," says one,
who had a long relationship with a lama, "but
it was difficult and strange, in no way a normal
relationship. It fuelled my fantasies about having
special qualities, but he debunked them. I felt
empowered by him but though he treated me with
respect, I was always aware he had other lovers."
Another woman speaks of the confusion that arose
from being first a humble devotee, then an exalted
sexual partner, then back in the ranks again.
"I felt used," she says "He put his needs above
mine."
More recently, a young English woman attended
a residential retreat. She thought she had been
singled out for special attention only to discover
that she was being invited to join a harem. "At
first I was flattered, and very open and trusting.
He encouraged me to fall in love with him - but
I realised that he was toying with me. I noticed
several other young, pretty women going in and
out of his apartment, when I confronted him with
this, he dropped me for the rest of the time I
was there."
Did she learn anything from her intimacy with
the guru? "He gave me good advice, but I am left
with a hangover of pain and confusion. I also
have doubts about Buddhism. If anything, I have
learnt to be more cautious."
Rand and the British Buddhist teacher Ngakpa Chogyam
Rimpoche share the view that the majority of westerners
sign up too quickly with their gurus and find
themselves in a much more intense relationship
than they had bargained
for. This is especially true of Tibetan Tantric
Buddhism which, at an advanced level, incorporates
sexual union into spiritual practice.
Rand believes that westerners often fail to make
the distinction between a teacher who helps along
the way and a guru who is an enlightened being.
"Some Tibetan lamas do not see themselves as accountable
in the western sense of the word," says Ngakpa
Chogyam. "They get blown off-centre by too much
adulation."
This potential for adulation makes it vital that
teachers accept responsibility for the well being
of their students. Responsibility must include,
if not celibacy, then extreme care with sex. According
to psychologist Deborah Clarke, everyone who enters
into a spiritual or therapeutic relationship is
vulnerable to exploitation.
"I'd be furious if a guru made a pass at me,"
she says. "They should all know by now that people
with that sort of power have a moral and ethical
duty not to abuse it."
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