The Linda Pearce comments seem to stem from the following article: 
http://www.culteducation.com/group/1195-transcendental-meditation-movement/20543-sexy-romps-of-the-beatles-giggling-guru.html
 
http://www.culteducation.com/group/1195-transcendental-meditation-movement/20543-sexy-romps-of-the-beatles-giggling-guru.html

 

 This article was also quoted before on FFL by WillyTex in April 2010 and 
Curtis in July 2010.
 ------------------------------------------------
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <LEnglish5@...> wrote :

 I get a lot of thigns wrong, thanks for the correction. 

 L
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote :

 and you are incorrect I never said that about Jerry. And as I recall it was 
Judith Bourque who had that dream, not Linda Pearce, so you got that wrong too.
 --------------------------------------------
 On Sat, 4/5/14, LEnglish5@... mailto:LEnglish5@... <LEnglish5@... 
mailto:LEnglish5@...> wrote:
 
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Marshy
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Saturday, April 5, 2014, 7:00 AM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 I spent most of it addressing one specific passage
 and pointed out that Michael had already (IIRC) correctly
 quoted someone who cast doubt on much of her story.
 Is that called "shooting the messenger?" I thought
 that was a different thing, but o well.
 
 L
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, 
<turquoiseb@...>
 wrote :
 
 You realize, do you not, that you just spent an
 entire post "shooting the messengers" to protect
 the image of a dead man, right? And you wonder why people
 consider you a cult apologist.
 
 
 From:
 "LEnglish5@..." <LEnglish5@...>
 To:
 FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent:
 Saturday, April 5, 2014 7:14 AM
 Subject:
 [FairfieldLife] Re: Marshy
 
 
  ""He was a brilliant
 manipulator," said Mrs Pearce. "I just
 couldn't see that he was a dirty old man. We made love
 regularly. At one stage I even thought I was pregnant by
 him. And I don't think I was the only girl. There was a
 lot of talk that he'd tried to
 rape"
 This
 seems a far cry from the poignant tale of love told in
  her story of the affair (I've never read it, so
 going by hearsay). Anthony Campbell commented on her claim
 and said that Maharishi was in meetings with large groups of
 people at all hours of hte day and night during that time,
 and tehre's no way a secret affair could have happened
 without everyone (including him) being in on it. Campbell is
 now a practicing Buddhist.
 Mia
 Farrow says that given her frame of mind at that time, had
 Jesus given her a hug, she would have taken it the wrong
 way.
 The
 two surviving Beatles gave a benefit concert to raise money
 for TM some years back, spoke highly of Maharishi in
 interviews, and John Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, even
 attended the concert.
 By
 the way, wasn't it YOU, Michael, who quoted Jerry Jarvis
 t us, saying that he recalled Linda pierce as teh woman who
 stood up in advanced lecture recounting her dream that she
 and Maharishi got married and that Maharishi replied that
 she needed to learn to not confuse dreams with
 reality.
 years
 later, in an interview, she says that Maharishi appeared to
 her in a dream and begged her to publish the book in order
 to set the record straight and help repair his horribly
 damaged karma.
 
 L
 
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 <mjackson74@...> wrote :
 
 Nice
 write up:
 
 
 
 Maharishi inspired Beatles but died leaving £2b and rape
 rumours
 
 The Mirror, UK/February 7, 2008
 
 By Nick Webster
 
 
 
 He inspired the Beatles and promised world peace but died
 leaving £2 billion amid rumours of rape and murder
 
 
 
 He was the Sixth Beatle, a spiritual force with the
 potential to create world peace and end famine.
 
 
 
 Or he was an avaricious old man with a penchant for young
 girls who ruined the greatest pop group in history.
 
 
 
 It rather depends on your point of view, but one thing is
 certain about the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi who died this week
 aged somewhere between 91 and 97 - he was one of the richest
 religious leaders in history.
 
 
 
 The 'giggling guru' - so called because of his
 high-pitched laugh - lived in an opulent 200-room mansion,
 with helicopters and dozens of cars at his disposal, and was
 worth an estimated £2billion.
 
 
 
 He was the head of a movement with five million followers
 worldwide, all seeking a higher consciousness through
 transcendental meditation.
 
 
 
 But while the Maharishi promised world peace, and cynics
 laughed at his wacky teachings and yogic flying, sinister
 stories of sex, debauchery, and even murder cast dark
 shadows over his life.
 
 
 
 All but one of the Beatles cut their ties with their
 apparently celibate guru after it emerged he'd made a
 pass at Mia Farrow. The Maharishi's people, on the other
 hand, insist they simply fell out when he discovered the
 band were using LSD.
 
 
 
 Later another British disciple, Linda Pearce claimed the
 Maharishi had seduced her when he was in his 60s.
 
 
 
 "He was a brilliant manipulator," said Mrs Pearce.
 "I just couldn't see that he was a dirty old man.
 We made love regularly. At one stage I even thought I was
 pregnant by him. And I don't think I was the only girl.
 There was a lot of talk that he'd tried to rape Mia
 Farrow."
 
 
 
 And there was worse scandal to come. In 1987, when the
 Maharishi was living in a high security complex on the
 outskirts of Delhi, India, the Telegraph newspaper of
 Calcutta alleged five boys had died after being used as
 guinea pigs in the ashram's "medical
 institute" searching for cures for cancer, heart
 ailments and Aids. Nothing was ever proved.
 
 
 
 At the same time the fabulously wealthy guru's employees
 went on strike to increase their £10-a-month wages. The
 Maharishi simply moved into a five-star hotel in New Delhi
 until it was over.
 
 
 
 Mahesh Prasad Varma (or Mahesh Srivastava, depending on your
 source) was born in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh,
 sometime between 1911 and 1918.
 
 
 
 The son of a government tax inspector, he initially studied
 physics but then trained with a Vedic spiritual mentor,
 undertaking two years of silence in the Himalayas where he
 developed his ideas on transcendental meditation.
 
 
 
 The movement the Maharishi leaves behind, after his death at
 his luxurious retreat in Vlodrop in the Netherlands, has
 been called the world's richest cult. Yet when he began
 his first world tour as a spiritual leader in Burma in 1958,
 the Maharishi was praised for his austerity.
 
 
 
 One commentator wrote: "He asks for nothing. His
 worldly possessions can be carried in one hand."
 
 
 
 Meeting the Beatles a decade later changed all that. The
 band had been encouraged to attend a lecture by George
 Harrison's wife Patti, and were impressed enough by what
 they heard to accompany him to a weekend retreat in to North
 Wales.
 
 
 
 Along with Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull, they took the
 train to Bangor - where the Maharishi assumed the mob of
 screaming fans were there for him.
 
 
 
 Only a day into the retreat the news broke that the Beatles
 influential manager Brian Epstein had died from a suspected
 drugs overdose.
 
 
 
 Rather than let them grieve for their friend and first
 mentor, the Maharishi told them their tears would cause
 "vibrations" which could trap Epstein's spirit
 on this spiritual plane rather than let it travel to the
 next. And he instructed them to be joyful and laugh.
 
 
 
 Months later all four Beatles, their partners and 60s stars
 Donovan, Mike Love of the Beach Boys, and Mia Farrow and her
 sister Prudence headed off for a three-month retreat to the
 Maharishi's centre on the banks of the Ganges.
 
 
 
 Funded by a tithe of one week's wages from each of its
 students, the bank balance of the ashram received a massive
 boost from the world's biggest pop stars.
 
 
 
 They expected to find spiritual enlightenment, but what they
 actually found was what Ringo called "a bit like
 Butlins." He and his then wife Maureen left after a
 fortnight, desperate for "egg and chips." Paul
 McCartney and his girlfriend Jane Asher quit too.
 
 
 
 Then came the stories of the Maharishi's attempt to have
 sex with Mia Farrow. John Lennon said later: "There was
 a hullabaloo about him trying to rape Mia and a few other
 women. The whole gang charged down to his hut and I said:
 'We're leaving!' He asked why and I said:
 'If you're so cosmic, you'll know why.' The
 Maharishi gave me a look that said: 'I'll kill you,
 you bastard!'"
 
 
 
 But none of this dented the Maharishi's growing global
 popularity. Travelling the world in a pink aeroplane, his
 fame and his movement grew and he featured on the front
 cover of Time magazine in 1975. His transcendental
 meditation technique involved silently repeating a Sanskrit
 mantra for 20 minutes twice a day. And since scientific
 studies have now concluded it has some real health benefits,
 it is never short of new adherents
 
 
 
 And at £1,300 per person for a standard introduction
 course, it's easy to see where the Maharishi's cash
 came from. But there were times when the guru's ego got
 the better of him... He once told an audience in New York
 that if just one per cent of the world's population
 adopted his teaching it would "neutralize the power of
 war for thousands of years".
 
 
 
 Consequently, he claimed credit for peace in the Lebanon and
 Mozambique, and for reducing crime in Washington and
 Merseyside.
 
 
 
 And after the terrorist outrages of September 11, 2001 the
 Maharishi claimed ifany government gave him a billion
 dollars he could end terrorism and create peace.
 
 
 
 His claims were ridiculed - as were his 40,000yogic fliers
 who, as the Natural Law Party, promised that levitating
 while in the Lotus position would bring peace and
 enlightenment. In the end it brought just 0.4 per cent of
 the votes in the election.
 
 
 
 Last month the guru, who lately communicated through a video
 link, announced his retirement. His spokesman Bob Roth
 says:"He'd done what he set out to do."
 
 
 
 Apart from world peace.
 
 
 
 Gurus: Good, Bad & Ugly
 
 
 
 Osho: The "Rolls-Royce guru" - his followers
 wanted to buy him one for every day of the year.
 
 
 
 Charles Manson: Serving life after Manson Family killed
 Sharon Tate, pregnant wife of Roman Polanski in LA in
 1969.
 
 
 
 Timothy Leary: Former Harvard professor of psychology
 championed psychedelic drugs.
 
 
 
 Amma: Mata Amritanandamayi - the Hugging Saint - gives her
 services free to all religions. May have given out 26
 million hugs. 



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