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RELS 225 2009-01-28: ISKCON. Attendance No Announcements Review of last class Spiritual Quest of Generation X Hare Krishna. Review of last class. Why did recent cults emerge? Response to cultural change Change in values Social structure Surrogate families Deinstitutionalization
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RELS 225 2009-01-28: ISKCON • Attendance • No Announcements • Review of last class • Spiritual Quest of Generation X • Hare Krishna
Review of last class • Why did recent cults emerge? • Response to cultural change • Change in values • Social structure • Surrogate families • Deinstitutionalization • Religious institutions • Expression of cultural continuity • American Great Awakenings every 60 years or so. • History of Religions: It’s always been this way.
Asian Influence in the USA • Turn to the East in 1965-1975 • 1924 Asian Exclusion Act until 1965 • Hinduism • 4 million practicing Transcendental Meditation in the US at one point • Ragneesh (“Osho” from 1989 on) • Pete Townsend (the Who) • “Between 1969 and 1971 Townshend, along with other devotees to Meher Baba, recorded a trio of albums devoted to the yogi's teachings: Happy Birthday, I Am, and With Love.” See O Parvardigar
1893: World Parliament of Religions • Next to the World Fair in Chicago • Attended by thousands • Dominantly Christian, but some Shinto, Zen, Hindu practitioners. • Small, unassuming Hindu was the star: Vivekananda
ISKCON (Hare Krishna) • Mantra: Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare • George Harrison (After the breakup of the Beatles) • My Sweet Lord • All his love songs: he’s not singing to a woman. • Boy George
History of Hare Krishna • A sect of Hinduism. • Not really a NRM. • Only new to us in North America. • “Hinduism” is multi-form, although now it is becoming homogenized. • Krishna Consciousness is from the Middle Ages in the form of GaudiyaVaishnava. • ISKCON founded in 1966 in New York City by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
Two styles of Hinduism: Monism & Bhakti • Monism • Philosophical • The One (Theosophy) • Rooted in the Upanishads (5th Century BCE) • Brahman is One. • Chandayoga Upanishad: “Tat vamasi” “That art thou” • Become ready for this by practicing yoga. • Surrender to a guru. • Humiliation to show non-egoism • Key to salvation is knowing (knowledge) • Only when you have correct knowledge do you know how to love.
Two styles of Hinduism: Monism & Bhakti • Bhakti • Devotion • ISKCON falls into this category • Like Christianity, with a God of Love. • Out of true love comes knowledge. • BhagavadGita • Krishna plays a flute, advises Arjuna: • Arjuna has a dilemma: killing relatives in battle. • Lesson: no choice but to fight and fulfill your social duty as a warrior. Do your duty without concern for personal benefit. • How? Focus attention on me & I will assist you to do it with purity & detachment.
Medieval Origins • Krishna bhakti movement founded by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu • A late medieval saint from NR India, travelled all over India; popular. • Revival in late 19th Century • Caitanya initiated sankirtana • a practice requiring followers to dance in the streets, singing praises of Lord Krishna.
A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada • 1896-1977 • Had been manager in a chemical form, until his retirement in 1954. • Had published in English • Spiritual master was Bhaktisiddhanta (died 1936) • Instructed ACB to carry the teachings of Krishna Consciousness to the West. • Published Back to Godhead magazine, used to promote his movement in America. • Took order of sannyasa (religious ascetic, dedicated to religious cause) at age 59.
Growth in America • On a steamer, Prabhupada came to New York in 1965 with $50 in his pocket. • Wanders around Greenwich Village • Bumps into hippies, who become his first disciples. • By 1967, dozens of centres • 1987: 50 temples in US, 1775 other temples around world • Recruited alienated youth from the counterculture. • Membership began to decline in 1974 • As a missionary movement, ISKCON was opportunistic in its recruitment strategies.
Appearance • Sikha: Men shave head, • To avoid vanity • except for a tuft at the end. • Signifies surrender to guru and Krishna
Appearance • Dhoti: Men wear robe: • white • Saffron if far along. • Formal wear in India. • Sari • Women wear traditional Indian garb • Any colour, but modest
Appearance • Tilak • Dab of clay down the middle of forehead • Reminder that body is temple of lord. • Body must be pure, in all you eat & do.
Practices • Kritan • Chanting for hours to get into a state • Centre of religion • Prasadam • Free food distribution • Famous for its cuisine • All food is an offering to the Lord • Also, giving to emergency relief, like Red Cross.
Beliefs • Not sophisticated doctrine • Until recently, women had to hope for reincarnation as a man • Emphasizes orthopraxis over orthodoxy.
Teachings • Find blissful consciousness is this lifetime. • We are spirit souls, parts of God. • Krsna is omni-everything, father & sustainer • Absolute truth is in all great scriptures, • But the BhagavadGita is oldest, the literal record of God’s actual words. • Learn from an unselfish focussed guru • Offer food to Krsna before entry • All actions are for Krsna, not for our sense gratification. • To achieve love of God, recommended chant Lord’s names, e.g., mantra • We are in the end times; The universe is near its end (Apocalyptic)
Krishna • Krsna is worshipped in one of his manifestations: a charming young man living in a village. • Beautiful, mischievous, girls all in love with him. • Approachably human, metaphoricized as love. • You’re supposed to fall in love with him. • Radha the gopi receives special favour.
Nature of humanity • Traditional Hindu view. • We are spirit souls • Obtain release from this material existence if you can. • A world of sadness, woe. • Reincarnation is not a good thing • Karma • Death & the Afterlife (escaping samsara) • One ceases to exist & becomes one with Krishna.
The Good life • Highly prescriptive, puritanical religion • Ascetic. • Wear this, get up at this time, chant this number of mantras. • Very strict dietary rules. • Men & women live separately; highly chaperoned. • In favour of children. • The ritual is not magical; it reminds you of what your inner discipline is. • Pacifist; communal.
Overall • Particularistic religion. • It’s the ultimate religion. • Good book: • Canadian Susan Palmer, Moon Sisters, Krishna Mothers, Rajneesh Lovers: Women's Roles in New Religions.
Decline • Charges of brainwashing from anti-cultists • Media portrayed it as a dangerous cult. • Alternate fundraising • Had been bookselling • Branched into music, art. • Dressed as Santa Claus soliciting donations • Movement became financially-driven, rather than principle-driven (spreading the movement) • Now, ISKCON’s sectarian lifestyle has given way to domesticity: jobs, families, etc. • ISKCON’s temples are used by thousands of East Indian immigrants in North America. • “A faith too accomodated to worldliness lacks power for conversion” (Rodney Stark)
Homework • For Monday: • Read chapter 4 in Comprehending Cults (note the change) • Write quiz on Chapter 4 at http://moodle.library.stfx.ca • For Wednesday: • Read the reading on “Unification Church” and write “Reading Quiz on the Unification Church” on Moodle
Joining NRMs: Who and Why? • Stark & Bainbridge say not: • Gullible • Losers • Everyone • Not the dregs; more like the best & brightest.
One early theory • What were people lacking? • What does the movement offer? • Where do they overlap? That is where the ‘reason’ is to be found. Derived from deprived classes converting to Christian sects.
Then: the 60’s NRMs • The converts in the 1960’s were privileged. • So the theory was modified by Glock: • Relative deprivation: • Economic • Social • Organismic (health, physical, & mental) • Psychic (love & affection) • Ethical (dissatisfaction with dominant values)
1965 Lofland & Stark • John Lofland & grad student Rodney Stark • Best early work on conversion. • Studied a group called “Divine Precepts” (Unification Church) • The very first cell of “Moonies” 12-15 of them. • Stark: Recent book Rise of Christianity. • Predisposing conditions: • Tensions • Religious orientation • Seeker (already reading, investigating) • Situational Contingencies: • Encounter • Bonds-making • Bond-breaking • Interacting
Who joins? • Join through social networks. • They liked the people. • Left when people disappointed them. • People without: • Ideological alignment • Other commitments (family, mortgage) • With history of seekership • People looking for rewards & compensations: • Needs • Meaning • Status • Other: • hostile environment (Christianity?) • Competition
Characteristics • Young • Even younger in the 1970’s • Middle-upper middle class • No appeal to working class • Higher educated • Balanced male-female • Although Moonies started male • More secular religious backgrounds • But large Jewish representation, especially in Zen.
1984: Two Resources • Radical Departures, by Saul Levine. • North American psychiatrist • Good for parents of cult members. • 800 interviews • The Making of a Moonie by Eileen Barker • British sociologist • Interviewed/surveyed all Moonie attendees for 10 years. • Compared with a control group.
Levine and Barker’s findings: • Barker • Respectable families • Overachievers • Disrupted at university (disappointed with larger world) • Levine • No more psychopathology than normal • Overacheivers • Quietly suffering in frustration for years • Identify too strongly with parents • They like their parents. • Try to please them • No strong romantic relationship in adolescence • No all-nighters stoned, pondering metaphysics. • 90% of joiners left voluntarily in less than 2 years.