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Published: January 28, 2014 08:42 IST | Updated: January 28, 2014 10:20 IST
Indian Consulate looking into ‘Vedic pandits’ disappearance

Narayan Lakshman

Consul General Ausaf Sayeed said none of the pandits had sought any assistance 
from the Consulate for their repatriation to India.

The Indian Consul General in Chicago has said that no complaints or information 
has been received from either the Iowa-based Maharishi Vedic City, or from any 
one of the 130 “Vedic pandits,” or religious scholars brought here from India 
for studies and training, who have said to have gone “missing” in the last 
seven months.

In an email to The Hindu Consul General Ausaf Sayeed said none of the pandits 
had sought any assistance from the Consulate for their repatriation to India, 
and “The Consulate has no information on the current whereabouts of the missing 
pandits and whether they are working elsewhere.”

Dr. Sayeed further clarified, “The Maharishi University has also not deposited 
any passport of their missing employees with the Consulate.”

Earlier, a Maharishi University official said that the missing pandits were “in 
violation of U.S. immigration law and it is therefore a federal matter, beyond 
the legal jurisdiction of local officials in Iowa or the Indian Consul General 
in Chicago,” however adding that, “The prior Consul General has visited the 
pandit campus in Iowa and expressed great pleasure at the program and 
facilities.”

Although Dr. Sayeed said that the Consulate General was in the process of 
ascertaining full facts of the case, what is evident is that unprecedented 
numbers of R-1 visa holders have been vanishing from the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi 
institutions since they began coming here for their training since 2006.

In messages sent to The Hindu earlier, William Goldstein, Dean of Global 
Development and General Counsel to the Maharishi University of Management, 
based in Fairfield, Iowa, said that the Global Country of World Peace (GCWP), 
the U.S. organisation sponsoring the pandits’ R-1 visas and their stay in this 
country, had not received any prior communication from the scholars before they 
went “AWOL” (Absence Without Leave).

Mr. Goldstein said that while they did not know for sure what they pandits were 
doing after their departure from the Vedic city, but suspected that many of 
them were “working simple jobs in restaurants as the ones who have returned or 
the few we have information on seem to have followed that pattern”.

He added that it could be that, “Someone is misinforming them about the 
financial opportunities and the legal implications, and their prime motive 
appears to be to generate more money for their families,” and there could be an 
“organised racket brokering the operation”.

Further, Mr. Goldstein said that few, if any, of the pandits spoke English at 
all, and allegations made by the Chicago-based Hi India newspaper that the 
pandits’ initial contract signed with the Maharishi institutions for travel to 
the U.S. had not been translated from English to Hindi were “untrue”.

Mr. Goldstein also said, “I am the attorney who spent many hours before and 
after the project launched working with the U.S. State Department and Indian 
passport officials setting up the visas for the project.”

The Hindu contacted the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) 
regarding this matter, but their office in Minneapolis, which is dealing with 
the case, was closed owing to extreme weather conditions.

An ICE official however noted that missing person reports were generally not 
filed with ICE, rather they had to be submitted to local law enforcement 
authorities and in the case of foreign nationals with the government concerned.

Keywords: Indian religious scholars, Vedic pandits, R-1 visas, Maharishi Vedic 
City, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Printable version | Jan 28, 2014 7:17:46 PM | 
http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/world/indian-consulate-looking-into-vedic-pandits-disappearance/article5625701.ece

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