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Brahma Kumaris: something for everyone

The Brahma Kumaris work for free to spread peace across cultures using techniques like meditation, workshops and spiritual training

The founder of the Brahma Kumaris, Brahma Baba, envisioned a time when people from all over the world would come to Mt Abu to learn about spirituality and experience inner peace. That was in the early 50’s, just after the Brahma Kumaris community moved there from Karachi, following the partition of India and Pakistan. In 1976, I was part of a small group from the UK, Australia and Germany visiting Mt Abu for the first time. We were welcomed with love and wonderful Indian hospitality by the elder sisters (the leadership is in the hands of women) and the rest of the community there. After that first trip, I decided that I wanted to help others gain the spiritual treasures that were opened up to me on that journey.

I started helping at the first BK centre in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1978, and, in 1982, moved to the London centre. By then the London centre was assuming the role of international co-ordinating office, as work began to spread around the world - as well as the UK. Those first two or three years in London I did not find easy. I was thrown in at the deep end of administration and events organisation - without any experience. I think the only office training I had had was learning touch typing one summer in my dad’s office, when I was 15 and looking for something to do! Luckily, I could learn fast and gradually gained confidence in a range of tasks, such as PR and media, arranging travel, organising and running meetings and events. This made me rely on my spiritual resources and stop trying to be the best at everything, which was a habit of mine. It was good to be able to make mistakes, learn from them and move on.

From meeting in small houses and community centres for our morning class (each day we gather at 6.15am to meditate together and share some of the teachings given by the founder), we were able to build our own centre in 1991, and added a further building in 2003. Global Co-operation House was a place where we could hold daily courses and activities for the public, as well as major events (the hall seats 500) and from where we could reach out into the community.

Today, about 300 meet there every morning from a wide variety of cultural and ethnic backgrounds. There is a varied menu of courses: Raja Yoga meditation, stress management, positive thinking, anger management and self-esteem. Hundreds of speakers (BKs and others) share their views and experiences in talks, seminars and workshops on subjects ranging from leadership values to vegetarianism. Every December they put on a pantomime for the local community and local schools, when, over 14 performances, some 7,000 people visit the house.

I have enjoyed working with a variety of groups, who wanted meditation and spiritual skills training brought into prisons, to social workers, healthcare workers, educators, those recovering from substance abuse, youth trainers and young people, women’s and men’s groups and many others.

One of the most innovative programmes has been Spirituality and Men, now running for nearly 10 years. In a women-led organisation, men got together to start this group to explore aspects of personal transformation.

The 1993 opening of the Global Retreat Centre in Nuneham Courtenay, just south of Oxford, allowed us to start holding residential retreats in a tranquil and enabling atmosphere. These help individuals clarify their vision and purpose, experience their inner being and their relationship with God. People find out about each other, too. At one seminar, which brought together staff from all levels of the prison service, a prison auxiliary expressed how touched he was to find out that prison governors also had feelings of humanity! People begin to see that there is another way of doing things, of stepping out of the prevailing culture of competition and consumerism and to bringing spiritual values such as compassion, respect and love into their lives. There we sometimes host dialogues for leaders and for people of different faiths. Each summer, the children of BK families and youth groups spend five days having fun there, while learning to be better human beings.

People ask whether we are a cult trying to convince gullible minds. I think that the best way to answer this question is an invitation to come and experience it for yourself! People also question if we have any motive behind offering everything for free. Our position is: can you charge for peace of mind, which is everyone’s right anyway? If people benefit from something, they will want to give. We all work as volunteers - as a full-time volunteer my needs are met, but I do not receive wages.

Being involved in all of these activities has given me a tremendous amount of joy, but, above all, I am filled with gratitude that I have been able to use my life to help others in whatever small way I could. If people come to me feeling very unhappy and I am able to help them figure out a way forward, so that they go away smiling, that’s the best and most important part of what I do. It’s where I see God’s magic at work.

I now visit Mt Abu frequently. I love to be in the spiritual atmosphere, which somehow takes you into its arms and rocks you. You forget whatever you have left behind. Everything assumes a sacredness there, whether the cooking and offering of food to God, the early mornings (we meditate at 4am) or the distinctly Indian way of telling you that everything is always OK in the bigger scheme of things because God is in charge. On a recent visit, I was meditating with a group of 25,000 people – and that included several thousand from 96 countries!

I’ll write more about the meditation experience in tomorrow’s blog.

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8 comments from readers

Ex BK
09 May 2007 at 17:59

I am an ex member of the bkwsu, I was a member for over 10 years so I am experienced. They believe that they have sole access to god and that god visits them at their headquarters in India roughly 10 times a year. When Maureen Goodman talks about mt Abu in India she is actually referring to the yearly pilgrimage that all members are encouraged to make where they believe they are sitting in a room where god himself is sitting with them in the body of one of their senior members. They also believe that the world is to be destroyed at any moment and only the bks will be going to heaven. In fact they think that anyone who is not a bk is will have to die a hirrible painful death as a punishment for their sinful actions, whereas the bks will follow god like a procession then rest with him before inhabiting the whole globe by themselves

avyakt7
12 May 2007 at 19:49

My experience with God.

Last March 2007, I went to Mount Abu in Rajasthan, India. 20,000 people from many nationalities were there in a huge auditorium. It was packed. These people were waiting for God to appear. “He” appeared, gave a talk and went away.

The thought behind it is that God is a soul. Human beings are “beings” meaning souls as well but with a body, therefore humans.

God does not have a body. “He” is incorporeal and thus, “He” needs to take a body in order to communicate with us. In that occasion, “He” took a body through a process known as channeling.

The message in these meetings is simple. We are souls living on the illusion that we are perishable bodies. Thus, become soul conscious to avoid the suffering of only being aware of an impermanent body …and the second part of the message is…the world will go through a deep period of change marked by natural disasters and world wide political unrest; thus soul consciousness is necessary to overcome these changes and minimize suffering.

It wasn’t hard for me to figure out that natural disasters and political unrest are taking place. Had the chance to watch the movie “The inconvenient Truth” with Al Gore, where the facts as I understood it where laid out in a different way, but with the same message. A quick look at drinkable water scarcity around the world as well as the proliferation of atomic weapons and terrorism added up to an easy to solve equation which requires minimum thought.

With everyone else stating that God is here or there or that God does not exist, How do I know if this is really God?

The short answer is by relationship and experience. When you are in relationship with someone, you know just about everything about that person. In the same way, you have a relationship in a subtle manner with God. That relationship is so powerful that it must bring transformation in you. You will not be the same again. In my case, my own little world was transformed in such a deep way that I felt the mythological phoenix bird was me. I was being reborn again out of my own ashes.

Ask yourself: What is your relationship with God? Are you a happy, genuine, positive individual as a consequence of being colored by God’s company?

I had the fortune of having many subtle experiences with God. One of them was there in India. I was meditating in a mountain, overlooking at the beauty of nature. In a moment of deep feelings, I extend my hands as if I wanted to reach God’s hands as if I wanted to hold onto something, as if I was looking for that protection and love… then after that I stopped meditating and went away.

The next day I left Rajasthan. On my way out, I stopped by to say “good bye.”

I received some sort of “fortune cookie,” a blessing which is given randomly. Mine was: “You have the happiness that the Father of all souls have taken your hands, and has called you his special beloved child.” Probably the odds of winning the Lotto are higher than to receive the exact reply at the right time.

When God comes you feel this energy in that room. The first time I went there, tears were coming out of my eyes. I cannot explain why. The soul has its own language.

There is no “fireworks” there. No magic act. No scientific responses… but I felt simplicity, royalty, love and a sense of belonging. That is what Brahma Kumaris meant to me.

I am always surprised on how people nowadays are unable to feel. Without feelings you cannot have a connection with an entity which only feels purity. Feelings are the language of souls. To feel the beauty of nature, without trying to analyze it. To feel the rhythm and timing of music without placing a label on it. To feel the vibrations of different people that come your way without having to ask for their intentions… to feel joy, happiness, bliss without the need of “technology”…We reach God with our hearts. Never with our thinking heads.

To feel empathy. To have greater sensibility to those things beyond the grasp of our physical senses is something which is not being taught at universities. We come equipped with this when we are toddlers but… we loose it as we grow older and “wise” ….

To feel is something God taught me again. To feel “Him” is something which I cherish, something fulfilling, blissful; beyond any words or explanations. Something which I have never experienced before with all my university degrees…I am no longer describing life, analyzing it, dissecting it.. but being in it. Tasting it. Experiencing it. Not being afraid of it….then, finally…loving it. As the Father, the child.

Even though many can argue in different ways, to me the authority of experience it is all that matters. I felt God. My heart tells me so. I felt it in India.. and it was through the Brahma Kumaris teachings.

bubbles123
19 December 2007 at 16:31

the brahma kumaris are a cult in india. in western countries they pose like a reformation movement. but internally, their main motive is to promote their brahma baba. first they enter as a movement or sympathetic people, later they try to put the brahma baba into your life. this brahma baba is not a holy person though. he was born just like you and me, and lived like you and until the Satan(the angel of light) caught hold of him and started telling him these petty little prophecies.

and this brahma baba has a daughter. and he is going to marry his own daughter in the golden age.

What a cult !! what a peace !!!

and also they are very anti christian. i am an xbk, and i know all their stuff. They are very inconsistent when talking about Jesus Christ. I was discussing Jesus with them most of the time. One of my seniors said : Jesus is just a mediator, and we are accessing the supreme Father. so we don't need Jesus as the mediator anymore.

The Bible says: there is a way which seems right to a man's eyes; but in the end, it leads to death.

Jesus said: I am the Way, the Truth and the Life, no one comes to the Father except through Me.

People want to ignore Jesus Christ, but to their disappointment he is the most essential one in saving a man from Hell.

als , they say we go in cycles and cycles for ever and you have to be paying for your bad karma for several reincarnations...

But Jesus simply forgave the sinner on the Cross. Jesus said: Today you will be with Me in Paradise..

God is so loving God. This cult is an evil cult, posing like a good one, and distracting people from the love of God found in Jesus.

Before becoming victims to this cult, please read your Bibles...

this cult is of the "angel of light" described in the Bible. the satan has disguised as a peace loving angel.

Beware of this cult. it will steal your children ..

---- immi712@gmail.com

Mythbuster
25 February 2008 at 19:20

Why are you giving a voice to this dupe of a ridiculous cult?

thought
23 December 2008 at 11:34

i've had wonderful experiences with the knowledge given by the brahma kumaris. the fact that god is one and as souls we are brothers and god is our father is explained so scientifically and logically. it promotes universal brotherhood, non-violence, peace.

parven
28 September 2009 at 20:20

please help me baba.i really want too go to brahma kumari,but my parent's don't allow me.....

parven
28 September 2009 at 20:20

please help me baba.i really want too go to brahma kumari,but my parent's don't allow me.....

parven
28 September 2009 at 20:21

please help me baba.i really want too go to brahma kumari,but my parent's don't allow me.....

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